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El. knyga: Terminology: Theory, methods and applications

Translated by , Edited by , (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)

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Terminology: Theory, methods and applications addresses language specialists, terminologists, and all those who take an interest in socio-political and technical aspects of Terminology. The book covers its subject comprehensively and deals among other things with concepts (the relation between linguistics, cognitive science, communication studies, documentation and computer science); Methodology, especially with regard to specialised language and dictionaries; the social-political challenges of the modern technological society and some solutions from a Terminological point of view; Terminology as a standard in multilingual communication and guardian of cultures. It is particularly suited as a course book.

Recenzijos

[ ...] especially useful for terminology practitioners in that it details terminological work all the way from the working principles to various stages in the collection and processing of material. -- Li Yunxing, Tianjin Normal University, China

Acknowledgements xi
An Overview Of Terminology
Social and political aspects
1(5)
Origins
1(1)
Development of the field
2(3)
The evolution of modern terminology
5(1)
Scientific and functional aspects
6(8)
The theory of terminology
7(2)
Terminology, a new practice
9(1)
The functions of terminology
10(2)
Schools and working methods in terminology
12(2)
Organizational aspects
14(11)
Different orientations according to spheres of influence
15(5)
Organization of terminology
20(2)
International cooperation
22(3)
Terminology, An Interdisciplinary Field
Terminology and linguistics
25(14)
Theoretical linguistics and applied linguistics
27(1)
Variety of the language system
28(1)
Lexicology
29(1)
Lexicography
30(2)
Terminology
32(1)
The specificity of terminology
33(1)
Terminology and lexicology
34(3)
Lexicography and terminology
37(2)
Terminology and cognitive science
39(6)
The analysis of terms
39(3)
Concept formation
42(2)
The relationships between concepts
44(1)
Subject classification
44(1)
Terminology and communication
45(5)
Specialized communication
45(2)
Terminology and specialized communication
47(1)
Terminology and translation
47(1)
Terminology and language planning
48(2)
Terminology and documentation
50(2)
The relationship between terminology and documentation
51(1)
Terminology, computer science and knowledge engineering
52(4)
Computer science at the service of terminology
53(2)
The usefulness of terminology for computer science
55(1)
The Foundations Of Terminology
Special languages
56(24)
Types of discourse
57(1)
General language and special languages
58(1)
The concept and scope of special languages
59(12)
General language and special languages
71(5)
Variation in special languages
76(2)
Special language documents
78(2)
The role of terminology in special language texts and documents
80(1)
The terminological unit
80(35)
Terms as systematic units
81(1)
The designation
82(13)
Concepts
95(12)
The term-concept relationship
107(4)
Function
111(1)
Terms as pragmatic units
112(3)
Terminology In Practice: Terminography
The foundations of terminological practice
115(1)
Theoretical principles
115(1)
International standards
116(1)
Material used in terminography
116(13)
Reference materials
117(1)
Documentation on documentation
117(1)
Documentation on the special subject field
117(1)
Documentation on terms
118(1)
Documentation on the research method and presentation of work
119(2)
Specific materials for terminographic work
121(1)
Support materials
121(1)
Extraction records
121(2)
Terminological records
123(4)
Correspondence records
127(1)
Query records
127(2)
Working methods
129(32)
Systematic searches
129(1)
Systematic monolingual searches
130(21)
Systematic multilingual searches
151(1)
Ad-hoc searches
152(1)
The query
153(2)
The search
155(2)
General process of ad-hoc searches
157(4)
Computerized Terminology
The concept and scope of computerized terminology
161(1)
Contribution of computer science to terminology
162(6)
Computer science and terminological methodology
162(2)
Computer science and terminological practice
164(2)
Artificial intelligence and terminology
166(2)
Terminology and data banks
168(7)
The creation of a data bank
169(2)
The organization of the data
171(1)
Data banks of interest to terminology
172(1)
The evolution and limitations of data banks
173(2)
Terminological data banks
175(19)
Definition
176(2)
Classification
178(3)
The design of a terminological data bank
181(1)
Compilation
181(3)
Storage
184(2)
Retrieval
186(4)
Limitations and problems
190(1)
The future of terminological data banks
191(3)
Terminology And Standardization
General standardization
194(5)
Basic features
195(2)
Standardization bodies
197(2)
Terminological standardization
199(4)
Standardization of terms
199(2)
Standardization of principles and methods of terminology
201(1)
ISO Technical Committee 37
201(2)
Terminology and neology
203(12)
An overview of neology
204(1)
Neologisms
205(2)
Linguistic characteristics of neologisms
207(1)
Pragmatic and sociolinguistic aspects of neologisms
207(2)
Standardization of neologisms
209(1)
International criteria for creating terms
210(5)
Professional Terminology: The Role Of Terminologists In A Language Service
Linguistic needs and language planning
215(1)
Planning and language services
216(1)
The technical tasks of languages services
217(2)
Language services and terminology
219(1)
The training of terminologists
220(5)
Background assumptions
221(1)
Training in terminology versus training terminologists
222(3)
Notes 225(8)
References 233(12)
Index 245