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  • Vocabulary to describe fridges and freezers @en
  • This Vocabulary provides the means to create a document which describes a large event or other connected series of events. The primary purpose is to help humans comprehend the programme, not describe absolute truth. A single event (or even series) may have multiple programmes. @en
  • Relationships without range and domains meant to be reused in different contexts @en
  • An ontology for organising theatrical data. @en
  • This ontology deals with the notion of reified events - events seen as first-class objects. @en
  • The Collections Ontology (CO) defines unordered collections (Set and Bag) and ordered collections (or List). This ontology has been inspired by the work "Putting OWL in Order: Patterns for Sequences in OWL" by Drummond et al. (OWL-ED 2006). @en
  • The COO provides a vocabulary for exposing available configuration options for car models. It allows indicating choices that can be made as well as compatibility, dependency, and inclusion information. The ontology imports and extends the GoodRelations ontology for e-commerce @en
  • This ontology is being developed by CSIRO under the eReefs project for describing data provider nodes, web services available and datasets that are hosted by them. This ontology features a module for describing Datasets. It does not however describe geospatial, temporal, organisational or domain concepts as these are intended to be included from other ontologies via the imports statement. Other modules complementary to the DPN ontology are http://purl.org/dpn/dataset and http://purl.org/dpn/services. This version aligns DCAT and DC terms and imports DPN services. @en
  • This vocabulary is based on the EPC Information Services Specification http://www.gs1.org/sites/default/files/docs/epc/epcis_1_0_1-standard-20070921.pdf @en
  • One key use case for this ontology is to facilitate the matching of needs and innovations. @en
  • The objective of gUFO is to provide a lightweight implementation of the Unified Foundational Ontology (UFO) [1-5] suitable for Semantic Web OWL 2 DL applications. Intended users are those implementing UFO-based lightweight ontologies that reuse gUFO by specializing and instantiating its elements. There are three implications of the use of the term lightweight. First of all, we have employed little expressive means in an effort to retain computational properties for the resulting OWL ontology. Second, we have selected a subset of UFO-A [1, 2] and UFO-B [3] to include here. In particular, there is minimalistic support for UFO-B (only that which is necessary to establish the participation of objects in events and to capture historical dependence between events). Third, a lightweight ontology, differently from a reference ontology, is designed with the purpose of providing an implementation artifact to structure a knowledge base (or knowledge graph). This has driven a number of pragmatic implementation choices which are discussed in comments annotated to the various elements of this implementation. The 'g' in gUFO stands for gentle. At the same time, "gufo" is the Italian word for "owl". For the source repository, see: <https://github.com/nemo-ufes/gufo> @en
  • OLiA Annotation Model for Uby Parts of Speech (Gurevych et al, 2012) extracted from the Uby DTD (http://purl.org/olia/ubyCat.owl, version of Nov 21th, 2012). References Iryna Gurevych, Judith Eckle-Kohler, Silvana Hartmann, Michael Matuschek, Christian M. Meyer and Christian Wirth, 2012, Uby - A Large-Scale Unified Lexical-Semantic Resource, Proceedings of the 13th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL 2012), Avignon, France. The DTD is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) license which is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ You are free to share (copy, distribute and transmit) the work, to develop your own extensions (adapt, remix) of the work, and to make commercial use of the work. @en
  • A vocabulary to describe touristic places: accommodations, points of interest, restaurants and attractions. @en
  • The Haystack Tagging Ontology is an OWL ontology for Project Haystack, a domain vocabulary for Building Automation Systems. @en