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cross-reference

 
Dictionary: cross-ref·er·ence   (krôs'rĕf'ər-əns, -rĕf'rəns, krŏs'-)
n.
A reference from one part of a book, index, catalog, or file to another part containing related information.

tr.v., -enced, -enc·ing, -enc·es.
To provide with cross-references.


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Simultaneous delivery of spirit messages through different mediums with a request to forward them to the right person. The idea, originated by the communicators themselves, was to disprove the suggestion that messages were merely the working of the medium's subconscious mind.

The earliest instance of cross-reference is registered in E. W. Capron's Modern Spiritualism (1885) from February 12, 1850. The medium was a Mrs. Draper. A large company was divided into two groups and sent to different rooms. The spirit of Benjamin Franklin purported to be present and spelled out a message telling the company not to move. The same message was then spelled out in the other room with instructions to go and compare. This method of communication was called "spiritual telegraphy" and was soon practiced between New York and Philadelphia or Washington, D.C., and between Baltimore and Pittsburgh.

A deceased sister announced herself to Robert Hare at Cape May, nearly a hundred miles from Philadelphia. Hare asked the spirit to go to Philadelphia and ask Mrs. B. Gourlay, a medium, to get her husband to go to a certain bank and inquire about a certain bill. On his return Hare found out that Dr. Gourlay had received the message and the bank testified that he came to inquire about the the bill.

Sources:

Bradley, H. Dennis. The Wisdom of the Gods. London: T. Werner Larvie Ltd., 1925.

Hare, Robert. Experimental Investigations of the Spirit Manifestations. New York: Partridge & Brittan, 1855.

WordNet: cross-reference
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a reference at one place in a work to information at another place in the same work
  Synonym: cross-index


Wikipedia: Cross-reference
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A cross-reference (noun) is an instance within a document which refers to related or synonymous information elsewhere, usually within the same work. To cross-reference or to cross-refer (verb) is to make such connections. The term "cross-reference" is often abbreviated as x-ref, xref, or, in computer science, XR. Cross-referencing is usually employed to either verify claims made by an author or to link to another piece of work that is of related interest. See, for example, the Linux cross-reference tool, [http://lxr.linux.no/source/init/main.c lxr for init/main.It can be found in Office 2007. In an index, a cross reference is often denoted by See Also. For example, under the term Albert Einstein in the index of a book about Nobel Laureates, there may be the cross-reference See Also: Einstein, Albert.

Contents

Hypertext

Cross-referencing in hypertext (XR) is maintained internally or externally to a document with either in-context (XRIC) or out-of-context (XROC) cross-referencing. These are analogous to KWIC and KWOC, which were very early computer applications inherited from the centuries-old idea of concordance.

Traditionally, reference numbers and footnote marks are examples of in-context cross-referencing, whereas the index and the reference list at the end of texts are examples of out-of-context cross-referencing. Out-of-context cross-referencing relies on the traditional, manually-produced indexes using subject or citation. This remained the mainstream text retrieval system until the advent of CD-ROM in 1985, since which the digital text, the hypertext, and eventually the World Wide Web and search engines, provided systems for XRIC.

Soon after the advent of the Web, there was a rumor that XRIC features of the Web were better than the Gopher's XROC system. Charles Goldfarb, one of the founding pioneers in SGML, satirically compared the antagonism between XROC and XRIC paradigms to a religious war, which would be moderately called the cross-reference war. While the Web surpassed Gopher, in that XRIC is better than XROC in hypertext, both are as complementary as the two sides of the coin. Unfortunately, however, the schism between both text retrieval paradigms appears reflected on ACM/SIGIR and ACM/SIGWEB much overlapping each other.

The narrow or common sense of hypertext implies XRIC, while the wide or true sense includes XROC as well. From the text retrieval point of view, hypertext as a new retrieval paradigm, objecting to XROC or subjecting itself mainly to XRIC, sounds like a self-defeating misnomer, because text retrieval and cross-reference well comprise both XROC and XRIC in themselves. Ironically, hypertext was coined by Ted Nelson who used to object to the wide spectrum of text retrieval or cross-reference and subject it mainly to the narrow idea of transclusion, or simply quotation, aiming for text patchwork rather than retrieval.

RDBMS

A table can have an xref as prefix to indicate it is a cross-reference table that joins two tables together via primary key.

Lexicography

In printed and online dictionaries cross-references are important for several reasons. According to Nielsen (1999) they form a network structure of relations existing between different parts of data, dictionary-internal as well as dictionary external. The abstract mediostructure consists of all the possible sets of cross-referential relations. The actual realisation of these referential networks may be function-related, i.e. support a dictionary function such as translation. A distinction can be made between use-related and function-related cross-references. It is also possible to show hierarchical relationships (genus/species relation) between terms as well as sequential relations by using cross-references. The important point is that compilers of dictionaries need to take a broad approach to cross-references in dictionaries as they are directly linked to other structures in dictionaries.

References

  • Sandro Nielsen (1999): "Mediostructures in Bilingual LSP Dictionaries." In: Lexicographica. International Annual for Lexicography 15, 90-113.



Translations: Cross-reference
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - krydshenvisning
v. tr. - forsyne med krydshenvisninger

Nederlands (Dutch)
verwijzing, van verwijzingen voorzien

Français (French)
n. - renvoi (d'un livre)
v. tr. - établir les renvois (d'un livre), renvoyer d'un passage à l'autre (d'un livre)

Deutsch (German)
n. - Querverweis
v. - querverweisen, mit Querverweisen ausstatten

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - αντιπαραπομπή
v. - παραπέμπω από ένα σημείο του βιβλίου σε άλλο

Italiano (Italian)
rinvio, rimando, rinviare

Português (Portuguese)
n. - remissão (f) recíproca
v. - citar

Русский (Russian)
перекрестная ссылка

Español (Spanish)
n. - remisión, referencia cruzada
v. tr. - remitir a, referir a

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - korshänvisning
v. - korshänvisa

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
互相参照, 对照处, 互见, 为...编制, 使参见

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 互相參照, 對照處, 互見
v. tr. - 為...編制, 互相參照, 使參見

한국어 (Korean)
n. - (한 책 속의) 상호 참조
v. tr. - (한 책 안에서) 서로 참조 시키다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 相互参照

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) الفات نظر القارىء الى مكان آخر في الكتاب (فعل) وضع فهرس, لكتاب‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮רשימת הפניות (מראי-מקום)‬
v. tr. - ‮הפנה מחלק אחד של הספר או המאמר לאחר, ערך רשימת הפניות (מראי-מקום) בספר‬


 
 
Learn More
xref (computer jargon)
grapheme (communications)
cross-refer

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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cross-reference" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more