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Building on established terminology frameworks in education and government: Methodologies, technologies, and challenges

The Welsh case
  • Tegau Andrews , Delyth Prys and Gruffudd Prys
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Handbook of Terminology
This chapter is in the book Handbook of Terminology

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Some general issues in terminology planning 1
  4. Section 1 United in the diversity
  5. The European Association for Terminology (EAFT) 18
  6. The role of terminology in the European Federation of National Institutions for Language (EFNIL) 25
  7. Terminology planning and language policies across the Romance-speaking area 32
  8. Section 2 Northern Europe
  9. Nordic added value in terminology planning 42
  10. Rise and fall — Lessons learnt 58
  11. Terminology planning from term-smithing to supporting interoperability 76
  12. A tale of enthusiastic experts and puristic professionals 94
  13. From ‘clarity and consistency’ to ‘domain loss’ 112
  14. Planning terminology for northern minority languages 128
  15. From separate to separated 148
  16. Section 3 Eastern Europe
  17. Consolidating terminology on a single online platform 178
  18. Learned and unlearned lessons from the history of terminology 201
  19. Challenges and strategies for a unified approach 218
  20. Terminology as cornerstone of language vitality and practical language policy 239
  21. Normative terminology management, its legal regulation and terminology work 256
  22. Dark and bright sides of terminology planning. Can we see daylight? 279
  23. The need for terminology planning in the digital age 298
  24. The road to independence 315
  25. Development of national terminology as a component of state-building: History, present, prospects 331
  26. Section 4 Western Europe
  27. Bottom-up terminology work to complement top-down terminology planning 356
  28. Efforts and challenges in translating concept to reality 377
  29. Decentralised and expert-driven with a global reach 392
  30. Terminology as the key to language policy 408
  31. Polycentric Galician terminology. Notes on terminology planning 430
  32. Terminology — From Wüster to AI 447
  33. Navigating legal language: German terminology in Belgium’s federal landscape 465
  34. Term planning in a lesser-used EU language 481
  35. Terminology training in a multilingual setting 497
  36. Terminology planning in a context of constitutional multilingualism 515
  37. Building on established terminology frameworks in education and government: Methodologies, technologies, and challenges 527
  38. Section 5 Southern Europe
  39. A successful model of terminology planning 548
  40. Collaboration as a key to standardized terminology 563
  41. Legal comparison for terminology development 580
  42. Terminology planning in need of recognition 601
  43. From terminological neology to terminology planning for corporate and professional initiatives 616
  44. From vernacular to contemporary terminology 638
  45. Terminology development for lesser-used languages in bilingual contexts 653
  46. Shaping terms: The evolution of terminology 670
  47. A dynamic and diverse terminological landscape 686
  48. From fragmentation to innovation: Terminology planning in transition 701
  49. Shaping the future of Serbian terminology: A path to rebirth 722
  50. Terminology planning from past to present 746
  51. Concluding remarks 763
  52. Contributors 779
  53. Index 795
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