I agree. This is p72:
This property associates an instance(s) of E33 Linguistic Object with an
instance of E56 Language in which it is, at least partially, expressed.
A mountain is surely made of a molehill here.
Can a name be expressed in a language? Yes. Can someone and recognize this
and docu
Hi Robert,
No questions the existence of names with a language. I do not remember
doing that.
I simply try, as often, to teach the group principles.
The scope note for E41 explicitly says:
"Different languages may use different appellations for the same thing,
such as the names of major cit
Hi Martin,
No one is proposing anything other than P72. Please stop creating issues
where none exist :)
"The Big Apple" is a name for the Place which is also known as "New York
City".
Does anyone disagree that "The Big Apple" is in English with the precise
semantics of P72, or that it is not a Na
Dear Gordon,
"The Library of Congress has only recently stopped assigning gender to
the referant of a name",
That is interesting!
I'd kindly ask for your expert opinion, about the "language" of a name.
We had introduced the language property of a title because of the
frequent cases of words
All
A librarian expresses an initial opinion:
What about gender of a name? E.g. "Gordon" is male; "Gordana" is female. The Library of Congress has only recently stopped assigning gender to the referant of a name, which has resulted
Dear all,
I follow up this comment with the information that the issue is 340
(apart from 533 for E34) and the minutes is from 44th crm-sig meeting.
For me, the formulation of the CRM issues list is very important and
helpful to such questions arising regarding the standard.
BRs
Athina
On 2