A Practical Course in Terminology ProcessingJohn Benjamins Publishing, 01.01.1990 - 252 Seiten Since the advent of the computer, terminology management can be carried out by almost anyone who has learnt to use a computer. Terminology management has proved to be an efficient tool in international communications in industry, education and international organisations. Software packages are readily available and international corporations often have their own terminology database. Following these developments, translators and terminologists are confronted with a specialised form of information management involving compilation and standardisation of vocabulary, storage, retrieval and updating.A Practical Course in Terminology Processing provides the key to methods of terminology management for the English language, for general and specific purposes. This unique course has been developed on the basis of years of teaching experience and research at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST, UK) and is particularly suitable for translation courses, freelance translators, technical writers, as well as for non-linguists who are confronted with terminology processing as part of their profession. The 1996 reprint of the paperback edition includes an index. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 15
Seite 1
... linguistics or information science or computational linguistics. We see terminology as a number of practices that have evolved around the creation of terms, their collection and explication and finally their presentation in various ...
... linguistics or information science or computational linguistics. We see terminology as a number of practices that have evolved around the creation of terms, their collection and explication and finally their presentation in various ...
Seite 5
... computational linguistics. The principles and methods of terminology processing, therefore, must be understood as the current state of the art in this field; they do not claim a wider validity, even though some are likely to prove of a ...
... computational linguistics. The principles and methods of terminology processing, therefore, must be understood as the current state of the art in this field; they do not claim a wider validity, even though some are likely to prove of a ...
Seite 10
... computational linguistics which is open to developments in theoretical linguistics, lexicography, computation and information science and can therefore stimulate progress in the applied field of terminology. The computational linguistic ...
... computational linguistics which is open to developments in theoretical linguistics, lexicography, computation and information science and can therefore stimulate progress in the applied field of terminology. The computational linguistic ...
Seite 11
... computational linguistics. Only a basic knowledge of linguistic theory, computational linguistics and information science is assumed of the reader. The content of the book divides into eight chapters. After this introduction, chapter 2 ...
... computational linguistics. Only a basic knowledge of linguistic theory, computational linguistics and information science is assumed of the reader. The content of the book divides into eight chapters. After this introduction, chapter 2 ...
Seite 129
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Inhalt
1 | |
13 | |
Chapter Three THE LINGUISTIC DIMENSION | 55 |
Chapter Four THE COMMUNICATIVE DIMENSION | 99 |
Chapter Five COMPILATION OF TERMINOLOGY | 129 |
Chapter Six STORAGE OF TERMINOLOGY | 163 |
Chapter Seven RETRIEVAL OF TERMINOLOGY | 187 |
Chapter Eight USAGE OF TERMINOLOGY | 207 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 231 |
INDEX | 255 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
appropriate areas characteristics collection communication complex compounds Computational Linguistics concepts conceptual system context created defined definition designation dictionaries Difficulties discipline documents English entities entry term EURODICAUTOM example existing expressed first fixed flexibility function identified individual influence information retrieval information science Infoterm knowledge structure language planning lexical items lexicography lexicology lexicon linguistic forms loan translation machine-readable means methods modification names natural language natural language processing networks nomenclatures nouns objects on-line organisations particular possible practice precision principles production profiles reflected related terms relationships represent representation scientific semantic semantic networks sender special languages special subject specialist specific speech acts standardised terms storage subject field subsets synonyms systematic technical techniques term banks term formation term record termino terminological data terminological information terminology compilation terminology processing theoretical thesauri tion translation equivalents types usage note users variants vocabulary word