Difference between revisions of "Glottopedia:Dictionary articles"
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*'''Other languages''': This section may contain the equivalents of the term in other languages. (See [[Glottopedia:Multilingual|Multilingual]].) | *'''Other languages''': This section may contain the equivalents of the term in other languages. (See [[Glottopedia:Multilingual|Multilingual]].) | ||
− | Additional sections may sometimes be appropriate. (See [[Glottopedia:Dictionary articles/Other sections|Other sections]].) | + | Additional sections may sometimes be appropriate. (See [[Glottopedia:Dictionary articles/Other sections|Other sections]].) For conventions regarding article titles, see [[Glottopedia:Dictionary articles/Technical terms|Technical terms]] |
===Special types of dictionary articles=== | ===Special types of dictionary articles=== |
Revision as of 06:19, 22 October 2007
Dictionary articles (Category:DICT) are a type of article that explains and gives basic information about technical terms of linguistics. They contrast with survey articles, which are articles about particular phenomena.
All ordinary dictionary articles should have a very similar structure: They should consist of sections with identical headings and occur in the same order. Only the first section (Definition) is obligatory. Some of the sections will be irrelevant for some terms. In most cases, however, a nonexisting section means that the work of writing it has not been done yet.
In addition, there are several special types of dictionary articles (see below).
All dictionary articles may also contain quotations from prominent places in the literature where the term is mentioned (defined, criticized, its orgin discussed, etc.). (See Quotations.)
Ordinary dictionary articles
Here is an ordered list of dictionary article sections:
- Definition: This section contains a succinct definition of the term, usually in a single complete sentence. (See Definition.)
- Term properties: This section may contain information on pronunciation, inflection, and derivational possibilities. (See Term properties.)
- Examples: This section may contain concrete examples of the phenomenon described by the term. (See Examples.)
- Comments: This section is for any kinds of comments on the definition or on the term. (See Comments.)
- Subtypes: This section may contain a list of subtypes of the phenomenon. (See Subtypes.)
- Polysemy: This section may contain a list of other meanings that this term also has. (See Polysemy.)
- Synonyms: This section may contain a list of other terms that also have this meaning. (See Synonyms.)
- Origin: This section may contain information on the origin and history of the term. (See Origin.)
- See also: This section may contain a list of linked related terms that are relevant but that do not appear in any of the other sections (e.g. relative pronoun in the article relative clause). (See See also.)
- References: This section contains a list of full references corresponding to the author-year references mentioned elsewhere in the article. (See References.)
- Other languages: This section may contain the equivalents of the term in other languages. (See Multilingual.)
Additional sections may sometimes be appropriate. (See Other sections.) For conventions regarding article titles, see Technical terms
Special types of dictionary articles
Abbreviations
Abbreviations that are commonly used should also get dictionary articles of their own, not just redirects. See Abbreviations.
Hypotheses and approaches
Dictionary articles dealing with named hypotheses, claims, principles, theories and approaches (such as laryngeal theory, Lexical Integrity Principle, theta criterion, Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar, Tagmemics) have a different structure (see Hypotheses and approaches). Unlike ordinary concepts, they cannot be defined, but only characterized or spelled out.