Terminology

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Revision as of 10:51, 30 August 2022 by Apm (Talk | contribs) (What makes great terminology)

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Delineation to nomenclature

  • Terminology … about single words
  • Nomenclature … systematic naming schemes (like naming molecules, or sets of similar engineering parts)

What makes great terminology

The four tl;dr to remember:

  • collision free
  • unannexable
  • baffling
  • memorizable

Avoid terminology collisions!! Instead seek white spaces on the terminology map.

  • collision/conflict-free
  • novel/unique

Major search engine conjures or no results. Or few that cover a highly unrelated topics.
Avoid competition with existing terminology especially for topics similar in nature

Seek unannexable terminology that can hardly be stolen away.

  • descriptive – Putting sufficiently descriptive elements into the term can
    make it hard to impossible for competing concepts adopt the same terms, and thus they cannot drown out search results.
    Strongly avoid to use things as generic as "nano" as prefix.

Seek catchy terminology!
But what does that even mean?
catchy = clickbaity + memorizable

Seek strongly curiosity-sparking terminology, clickbaity terminology.

  • mental dissonance causing, baffling on first sight – e.g. transparent aluminum

Seek memorizable (and communicable) terminology!

  • spellable (by target audience) – avoid a slew of consecutive consonants - no "qtpfsgui"
  • brief – (the less spellable the briefer it needs to be)

Seek humorous terminology!

  • humorous, good-kind-of-odd
  • repetitive self rhyming

Example

gem-gum-tec

  • collisionfree & novel – yes, till 2022 at least
  • descriptive – yes see: Gem-gum
  • baffling – yes, Hopefully achieved aim is to sparking the question:
    How the heck can gum (rubber) be made from gem (gemstone)?
    Resolved in the expanded (highly ununannexable) terminology "gemstone metamaterial technology"
  • spellable – yes, no consecutive consonants
  • brief – yes, obviously
  • humorous – maybe? – gem-gum sounds a bit funny/silly – reader may judge
  • repetitive self rhyming – yes, gem & gum differ by just one letter