<term>

<term> 技術用語とされる単一語,複数語,記号表示を示す. 3.3.4 Terms, Glosses, Equivalents, and Descriptions
モジュールcore — 3 Elements Available in All TEI Documents
属性 att.declaring (@decls) att.typed (@type, @subtype)
targetidentifies the associated <gloss> element by an absolute or relative URI reference
状態 任意
データ型
data.pointer
should be a valid URI reference that resolves to a <gloss> element
cRefidentifies the associated <gloss> element using a canonical reference from a scheme defined in a <refsDecl> element in the TEI header
状態 任意
データ型
data.pointer
the result of applying the algorithm for the resolution of canonical references (described in section 16.2.5 Canonical References) should be a valid URI reference that resolves to a <gloss> element
解説
The <refsDecl> to use may be indicated with the decls attribute.
sortKey 索引中にある当該要素の並び替えで使われるキーを示す.
状態 任意
データ型
data.word
any string of Unicode characters.
David's other principal backer, Josiah ha-Kohen
<index indexName="NAMES">
 <term sortKey="Azarya_Josiah_Kohen">Josiah ha-Kohen b. Azarya</term>
</index> b. Azarya, son of one of the last gaons of Sura
was David's own first cousin.
解説
The sort key is used to determine the sequence and grouping of entries in an index; if this attribute is not supplied, the textual content of the element is used for this purpose.
当該モジュールを使用するものindex keywords model.emphLike
下位
宣言
element term
{
   att.global.attributes,
   att.declaring.attributes,
   att.typed.attributes,
   ( attribute target { data.pointer }? | attribute cRef { data.pointer }? ),
   attribute sortKey { data.word }?,
   macro.phraseSeq
}
A computational device that infers structure from grammatical
strings of words is known as a <term>parser</term>, and much
of the history of NLP over the last 20 years has been occupied
with the design of parsers.
We may define <term xml:id="TDPVrend="sc">discoursal point of view</term>
as
<gloss target="#TDPV">the relationship, expressed through discourse
structure, between the implied author or some other addresser,
and the fiction.</gloss>
解説
This element is used to supply the form under which an index entry is to be made for the location of a parent <index> element.
In formal terminological work, there is frequently discussion over whether terms must be atomic or may include multi-word lexical items, symbolic designations, or phraseological units. The <term> element may be used to mark any of these. No position is taken on the philosophical issue of what a term can be; the looser definition simply allows the <term> element to be used by practitioners of any persuasion.
The target and cRef attributes are mutually exclusive.