English (Latin writing system)
- Ordonumerae
-
1. (protologism; contemporary latin) a generic strategy of arranging numbers in an taxonomy-like
explicit
way.
- 2. Etymology: "ordo" from Latin ōrdō;
ordo , ĭnis, m. from root or-; Sanscr. ar-, to go, strive upward; cf. orior, through an adj. stem ordo-;
(See ordo in
Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879)).
Numerae, from Latin nŭmĕrus , i, m. Gr. νέμω, to distribute; cf.:
numa, nemus, nummus, (See nŭmĕrus in
Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879))
- Ordonumerum multilinguae
-
1. (protologism; contemporary Latin) a generic strategy of arranging numbers in a taxonomy-like explicit
strategy applied to aid exchange of multilingual terminology without need of specifying any arbitrary
writing system.
- Scientiam basī
- Knowledge Base
- Scientiam basī prīncipāle
- 1. Structured knowledge with both natural language and reference for external identifiers related to
same
concepts (literal: main knowledge base)
- Scientiam basī de exemplum bonō
-
Knowledge from previously labeled (most likely) good implementations of the concepts.
- Reversum logicae
-
1. Reverse engineering (literal translation: reverse logic)
-
2. Based on existing knowledge base help to label new content.
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