Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Material consisting of data and/or computer program(s) encoded for reading and
manipulation by a computer, by the use of a peripheral device directly connected to the
computer, such as a CD-ROM drive, or remotely via a network, such as the Internet
(AACR2). The category includes software applications, electronic texts, bibliographic
databases, institutional repositories, Web sites, e-books, collections of e-journals, etc.
Electronic resources not publicly available free of charge usually require licensing and
authentication. Abbreviated e-resource. See also: electronic resources management.
nonprint
Materials published in a format other than writing or print on paper, including microfiche
and microfilm, slides, filmstrips, films, videorecordings, audiorecordings, and
information in digital formats such as machine-readable data files. Most nonprint library
materials require special equipment for listening and/or viewing. Compare with nonbook.
A-B-C-D-E-F-G-H-I-J-K-L-M-N-O-P-Q-R-S-T-U-V-W
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-A-
abstract
access
acquisitions
Materials which are purchased for library use. Activities related to obtaining library materials by
purchase, exchange, or gift, including pre-order bibliographic searching, ordering and receiving
materials, processing invoices, and the maintenance of the necessary records related to
acquisitions.(ALA Glossary)
almanac
A compendium of useful data and statistics relating to countries, personalities, events, and
subjects.
analytic
annotated bibliography
A list of works with descriptions and a brief summary or critical statement about each.
annotation
annual
anthology
A collection of extracts from the works of various authors, usually in the same genre or about the
same subject. (Example: Norton Anthology of English Literature). Sometimes a collection from
the works of an individual author.
appendix
Public records or historical documents, or the place where such records and documents are kept.
arrangement
article
atlas
audiovisual
author
Includes compilers, editors, and composers in addition to the main personal and corporate
authors who are responsible for a work.
authority file
The computerized list of subject, series, and name headings used in the Online Catalog.
autobiography
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-B-
barcode number
The 14-digit number appearing beneath the barcode found on the back on a book. Barcode
numbers are used to charge, discharge, and renew books on the online computer system.
bibliographic citations
The information which identifies a book or article. Information for a book usually includes the
author, title, publisher, and date. The citation for an article includes the author, title of the article,
title of the periodical, volume, pages, and date.
bibliographic database
A database which indexes and contains references to the original sources of information. It
contains information about the documents in it rather than the documents themselves.
bibliographic record
The unit of information fields (e.g. title, author, publication date, etc.) which describe and
identify a specific item in a bibliographic database.
bibliography
bindery
Books that need repair and loose issues of journals that are combined or bound into a single
volume are sent out of the library system to a company which binds them. These items are not
available to users until they come back to the library system.
bio-bibliography
A list of works by various authors (or, occasionally, one author) which includes brief
biographical data.
biography
blurb
Advertisement found on the book jacket designed to promote the sale of the book.
book review
Often called the Stacks, this multi-story section of the main Library contains approximately 65%
of the Library's collection, or 6 million volumes.
Boolean logic
bound volume
Formed when issues of a periodical title are gathered to form a hardback volume.
browse searching
Browse searching is limited to one field, such as author or subject heading, and the computer
matches the search statement exactly, so word order and spacing are important. This is in
contrast to keyword searching which may involve more than one field, and where word order is
not important. A browse search results in a list of entries from the one field, and one may scroll
through the list, either forward or backward, as far as one wishes, potentially through all the
entries in the list.
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call number
A combination of numbers and letters that provide a unique description of each item in a library
collection. Items are arranged on the book shelves by call number, so the call number is the
"address" of materials on the shelf.
card catalog
A card file, arranged by author, title, and subject, listing all items owned by a library. The Main
Card Catalog contains records for every cataloged item in the Library System from 1868-1975.
Each departmental library maintained a separate card catalog of its own collection.
carrel
To borrow books or periodicals from the library for a certain period of time.
CIC
circulate
circulation desk
Location in each library where you check out, return or renew items, ask about missing items, or
inquire about fines.
citation
citation index
An index consisting essentially of a list of works which have been cited in other, later works, and
a list of works from which the citations have been collected. Used to identify subsequently
published works that are related by subject to the cited work.
class number
Top part of a call number which stands for the subject matter of the book.
classification scheme
Classification systems which use numbers and/or letters, to represent the subject content of
materials. See also Dewey Decimal Classification Scheme.
commands
Symbols and/or terms used to retrieve computer-stored information.
conference report
Papers generated at or for a conference; may include minutes, transcripts, papers, and/or
presentations.
connectors
Words that indicate the relationship between search terms. Also referred to as Boolean
Operators. Common connectors are: AND, OR, NOT.
contemporary materials
continuation
A serial publication issued less than 3 times a year, i.e. not often enough to be called a
"periodical." Usually referred to as a "contin."
controlled vocabulary
The standardization of words which may be used to search an index, abstract or information
database. There is usually a published listing or thesaurus of preferred terms identifying the
system's vocabulary. See also Thesaurus (Example: Library of Congress Subject Headings).
copy card
A small plastic card that can be purchased and used in library photocopiers and laser printers on
campus. (However at this time they do NOT work in Microfiche/film reader/printers). Copies
made using the card are less expensive than using cash.
corporate entry
A corporate body (company, institution, government agency, etc.) which is listed in a cataloging
record as a heading for a publication (e.g., because the publication has no personal author).
copyright
The legal right to control the production, use, and sale of copies of a literary, musical, or artistic
work.
course reserves
Materials that instructors set aside for the students in a class to read. These items may be
borrowed for a short period and have very high fines for late returns.
cross reference
Word or heading that directs you from one part of a book, catalog, or index to another part.
cumulation
An index which is formed as a result of the incorporation of successive parts of elements. All the
material is arranged in one alphabet.
current periodicals
The latest or most recent issues of journals and magazines that the library receives.
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database
departmental libraries
Subject libraries located in either the Main Library or in other buildings on campus that provide
materials and services in a specialized area.
depository
descriptor
A method developed in the nineteenth century by Melville Dewey to classify and shelve items by
using numbers to represent subject content. It is a highly structured arrangement of all areas of
knowledge into numbers ranging from 000 to 999. The Dewey Decimal Classification System is
used by all Illinois Libraries except for Asian, Documents, Health Sciences, Law, Music, and
Maps in the Map and Geography Library.
dictionary
Source that provides word definition and correct grammatical usage. Dictionaries may be either
general or subject specific.
directory
A list of persons or organizations, systematically arranged, giving address, affiliations, etc. for
individuals and address, officers, functions, and similar data for organizations.
dissertation
downloading
due date
The date by which borrowed books and materials should be returned. To extend the loan period
for materials, the item should be renewed before the due date so that fines are not incurred.
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encyclopedia
endnotes
Notes (or statements explaining the text or indicating the basis for an assertion or the source of
material quoted) that appear at the end of a work.(ALA Glossary)
entry
An item or fact that has been "entered" (placed on a list or into a catalog or index or database).
See also citation.
essay
A literary composition in which the author analyzes or interprets a subject, often from a personal
point of view.
evaluation
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field
The part of a record used for a particular category of data. For example, the title field in a
database record displays the title for the record.
fines
The amount of money which is owed by the borrower if materials are not returned on time
FirstSearch
OCLC's end-user online reference menu accessing several databases, which are determined by
each participating library.
folio
An oversized book, too large for normal shelving. Folio call numbers begin with an F.; for
example, F. 912 R15C (The Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide). Folios are generally
housed in special cases in the various libraries. For folio locations in the Main Stacks, see the
Circulation Desk's web page or ask at the Circulation Desk in the Main Library.
footnotes
Notes (or a statement explaining the text or indicating the basis for an assertion or the source of
material quoted) that appear at the foot of a page of text. (ALA Glossary)
format
fulltext
Some of the article databases available from the Illinois library offer full text electronic access to
a wide range of articles.
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gazetteer
A geographical dictionary; usually includes longitude and latitude of a given place, population,
size, etc.
gopher
Computer software developed at the University of Minnesota that allows computers to find
information on other computers. Generally obsolete, it has been replaced by the advent of the
web browser.
government documents
Sources printed by or for government agencies. The Library has hundreds and thousands of state,
national, and international documents, most of which are serviced by the Documents Library
(room 200D Library). See also depository.
Graduate Library
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-H-
handbooks
General information source providing quick reference on a given subject. Handbooks may be
general or subject specific.
The legislation which allowed the original 18 schools to participate in LCS, thus starting the
statewide online catalog
hits
Refers to items retrieved from a database matching criteria you set. For example, if you do a
keyword title search in the online catalog for "linguistics" and retrieve 2798 items, that can also
be called 2798 'hits.'
holdings
hypertext
A document format which includes the use of specially coded terms or images which, when
selected or "clicked," connect to a linked location or file, or carry out a command to run an
application or program.
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IBIS (Illinois Bibliographic Information Services)
A set of electronic indexes in a variety of subject areas, available at library terminals, from
campus networked terminals, and from home computers using a modem.
i-card
The i-card is the official University identification card. It is used to access services and facilities
and to verify status.
ID
Your University ID, or "i-card", also serves as your library card. Your library number starts with
"20111..."
I-Share
I-Share Online
The statewide online catalog used by over 35 libraries in Illinois. The Illinois Online Catalog is a
subset of I-Share Online.
imprint
The name of the publisher, distributor, manufacturer, etc. and the place and date of publication,
distribution, manufacture, etc. of a bibliographic item.
incunabula
A book printed before 1501.
index
1. List at the end of books, encyclopedias, etc. that indicates by author, title and/or subject
the location of information within the book or encyclopedia.
2. Tool that arranges (by author, title, or subject) citations to articles in a selected group of
periodicals. See also bibliographic database.
Exchange of books or periodical articles between libraries for a brief period. A service you can
use to borrow library materials not owned by the University of Illinois from other libraries.
Internet
The global network of computers linked together, accessible mainly via the World Wide Web.
Originally started by government and international scientists to facilitate communication, it is
now used by the public at large.
invisible college
Researchers, scholars, or experts who have established communication links that are independent
of the literature in the fields in which they work. People who are on the frontiers of research,
regardless of the field, tend to communicate directly with one another about their work.
IP address
IP stands for "Internet Protocol". An IP Address is a four part number used to uniquely identify a
particular computer on a network using the TCP/IP (Internet) Protocol. For example,
130.126.33.246 could be an IP address.
IRRC
Stands for Illinois Research and Retrieval Center, the library office responsible for Interlibrary
Loan (ILL).
A four-part, ten-character code given a book (a non-serial literary publication) before publication
as a means of identifying it concisely, uniquely, and unambiguously. The four parts of the ISBN
are: group identifier (e.g., national, geographic, language, or other convenient group), publisher
identifier, title identifier, and check digit. (ALA Glossary)
ISSN (International Standard Serial Number)
The international numerical code that identifies concisely, uniquely, and unambiguously a serial
publication.(ALA Glossary)
Issue
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-J-
journal
A type of periodical which contains signed scholarly articles. Journals are usually published by
academic or association presses and include bibliographies.
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keyword
keyword searching
Keyword searching results in a list of database records that contain all the keywords entered as
search terms, according to the logic of the search. A keyword search may be performed in one
index, or it may be performed in more than one index combined.
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library ID
Your University ID, the "i-card", also serves as your library card. your library card number starts
with "20111..."
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magazine
A type of periodical containing popular articles which are usually shorter or less authoritative
than journal articles on the same subject.
magazine collection
A set of microfilm cartridges providing full text coverage of over 300 popular magazines from
1980 to the present. Located in the Undergraduate Library.
Main Library
Building that houses 65% of the total Illinois collection and approximately 20 departmental
libraries. Often erroneously referred to as the "graduate library."
manual
manuscript
A handwritten or typed composition, rather than printed. Includes groups of personal papers
which have some unifying characteristic and individual documents which have some special
importance.
An international standard format for the arrangement of cataloging information so that it can be
stored and retrieved using computer tapes.
media
Films, tapes, and other audio-visual materials that require the use of special listening or viewing
equipment.
media center
The Media Center, located on the lower level of the Undergraduate Library, offers materials in
non-print formats from slides to video-discs to audiotapes. Viewing facilities provided all hours
the library is open.
microcard
A trade name for a 3 x 5 inch sheet of opaque material bearing one or more microimages.
microfiche
microfilm
A format; photographically reduced images of printed pages on 35mm film. This format also
provides backup for periodicals with missing pages. Older issues of newspapers are often
microfilmed because newsprint deteriorates so rapidly.
microform
Formats for storing photographically reduced images onto plastic film. Microfiche and microfilm
are two types of microforms. A microform reader/printer is required to read or copy microforms.
monograph
A book. A separate treatise on a single subject or class of subjects, or on one person, usually
detailed in treatment but not extensive in scope and often containing bibliographies.
monographic series
A monographic series is a set of books that have a number of volumes with a definite end. An
encyclopedia is a good example.
monographic set
So called because unlike a periodical, the monographic set has a finite number of volumes.
Example would be an encyclopedia.
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NENG
Non-english - i.e., foreign language items.
NetID
Your Network ID (or NetID) is a name used to identify you on the campus network. It is
assigned to you when you first enter the University, and it remains associated with you
throughout your time here. Due to the nature of the various campus services which rely on the
NetID, it must be created for you, and may not be altered, except in the case of a legal name
change. Your NetID password is a combination of 6 to 8 letters, numbers, and other characters
that is used to confirm your identity when accessing the network and some services on the
network. Your Network ID and password are used to access the network.
Your email/Web Account logon will be the same as your Network ID. Your email/Web Account
password will initially be the same as your Network ID password, but it is stored in a different
location. When you change one, you must also change the other if you wish for them to be
identical.
If you forget your NetID password, you can have either set to anything you wish at the Account
Services Desk in the CITES weekdays from 8:30 to 5:00. They will need your University ID (or
other picture ID) to help you. Also, a fax form is available for faculty, staff, and off-campus
students.
newsletter
A serial consisting of one or two printed sheets containing news or information of interest chiefly
to a special group. (ALA Glossary, p. 153)
newspaper
A serial issued at stated, frequent intervals (i.e., daily, weekly, or semi-weekly), containing news,
opinions, advertisements, and other items of current, often local, interest.
NOCIR
Non-circulating - the loan period for items which do not circulate outside a library, such as
reference works. However, items with this circulation code may still be used within a library.
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-O-
OCLC (Online Computer Library Center)
online catalog
online database
Computer databases. Bibliographic databases provide access by author, title, and subject to a
group of periodicals, books, or proceedings. Numeric databases provide access to statistical
information.
operators
Words such as AND, OR, and NOT that are used to combine search terms to broaden or narrow
the results of a search.
overdue
Material which is not returned to the library by its due date is considered overdue.
oversize
Books that are too large for normal shelves; usually designated with a Q (quarto) or F (folio)
before the call number; stored in a special location.
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-P-
peer review process
Method used by scholarly journals to assure the quality and relevance of the articles they publish.
When an article is submitted, the editor sends copies to several reviewers (or "referees") who are
recognized experts in the subject of the article. Each reads the article and offers an opinion on
whether it is worthy of publication in the journal, using such criteria as soundness of
investigative method, whether the author shows adequate knowledge of research on the subject
to date, and whether the articles adds to knowledge in the field. Only if the reviewers agree that it
meets the relevant criteria will the article be published.
peer-reviewed article
peer-reviewed journal
Also called a "refereed" journal. A scholarly journal that used the peer review process to select
material for publication.
periodical
Materials published at regular intervals (at least 3 times a year) and intended to be continued
indefinitely. Examples of periodicals include magazines, journals, and newsletters.
phone center
primary sources
public domain
Material in the public domain is not copyrighted and may be used freely for any legal purpose.
Works may be in the public domain for several reasons. For example, the copyright may have
expired or the owner may have given up the copyright. Material published by the federal
government is not copyrighted.
publication
A book, periodical, musical score, etc. that has been "brought before the public"; in other words,
a work that has been printed and distributed.
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-Q-
quarto
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-R-
recall
1. a request by a library to a borrower for the return of a borrowed item before the due date.
2. To request a borrower to return a borrowed item before the due date. (ALA Glossary, p.
186)
3. A patron may request a recall of an item from a staff member.
record
refereed
Said of a periodical or other serial when manuscripts are evaluated by at least one subject
specialist in addition to the editor before being accepted for publication. (ALA Glossary, p. 188)
reference desk
Location in each library where you can get help in using the library and receive answers to your
questions.
reference librarians
Reference librarians are specialists in the field of information retrieval. Generally they have a
Masters degree in library and information science, and many have other graduate degrees as
well. They are available at reference desks to help you find information.
reference materials
A selection of library materials used by reference librarians and information assistants to help
people find information or do research. Reference collections contain many sources of
information, such as dictionaries, directories, almanacs, encyclopedias, atlases, and statistical
compilations. They may also have bibliographies, indexes, and abstracts. Reference materials
usually do not leave the library.
renewal
An extension of the loan period for charged library materials. As long as no one else requests the
book, renewals are unlimited. Renewals may be handled in person at a circulation desk, by phone
through the Telephone Center (333-8400), by mailing a renewal sheet available from the Main
Library Circulation Desk, or by accessing your Borrower Information or " My Account" through
the online catalog.
reprint
research strategy
reserve desk
reserve materials
A selection of specific books, periodical articles and other materials which faculty have indicated
that students must read for a particular course. These materials are usually kept together in one
area of the library and circulate for a short period of time only. To locate reserve materials, you
may need to use a reserve course file, ask at the circulation or reserve desk, or look up a title in a
reserve reading list. Each library has its own reserve system. Most reserves for 100 level and 200
level courses are held in the Undergraduate Library unless the instructor has made other
arrangements.
retrospective materials
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-S-
scope
The content of a work; what information is included and what information is excluded.
search
1. To look for information contained in a database by entering words or numbers in a search
box.
2. A process by which library circulation staff look in various library locations for a missing
item and hold it for the person requesting the search when it is found.
secondary sources
Books or articles that explain or analyze primary sources. For example, criticism of a literary
work.
see reference
A reference from a heading that is not used to one or more headings that are used. For example,
the Library of Congress Subject Headings does not use the heading Native Americans; there is a
see reference to Indians of North America, the correct heading.
A reference from one heading to one or more related headings. For example, in the Library of
Congress Subject Headings, under the heading Recycling, there is a see also reference indicating
to look at subheadings under subjects, e.g. Waste Paper--Recycling, Glass Waste--Recycling.
serial
Materials issued at regular or irregular intervals and intended to continue indefinitely. Includes
periodicals, magazines, journals, and yearbooks.
series
A group of separate bibliographic items related to one another by the fact that each item bears, in
addition to its own title proper, a collective title applying to the group as a whole. The individual
items may or may not be numbered. (AACR 2) For example, The Death Penalty is a book in the
Opposing Viewpoints series.
serial record
The portion of the Illinois card catalog which contains bibliographic information for serial
publications cataloged before 1979. The holdings and location information given for these titles
is no longer current -- consult the online catalog.
set
A group of related items. When conducting a search in a database, the results of a search form a
set. See also Boolean logic.
shelflist
The part of the Illinois Library card catalog which arranges cards by Dewey Decimal call
number rather than by author or title (i.e., a classified catalog). The shelflist was used formerly to
give location and holdings information, but has been replaced for this purpose since 1978 by the
online catalog. Some holdings for serials which ceased publication before 1950 are ONLY listed
in the shelflist. Holdings for these items are gradually being added to the online catalog.
SILC
stacks
Rows of shelves where library books and journals are stored. The largest collection of library
materials is stored in the Main Stacks, or bookstacks. In addition to the Main Stacks, each
departmental library has a stacks location where, in most cases, library materials that can be
borrowed are located. For example, Illinois History Stacks means the item is located in the stacks
collection of the History Library.
stopword
A word which is omitted from the index of a database. Stopwords are very common words (a, a,
the, to, for, etc.) that normally add little meaning to the subject content of the document being
indexed. Since stopwords are not indexed, they cannot be used as search terms, but will appear
when you print documents from the database.
style manual
A publication that sets forth the rules for composition, including format and manner of citing
sources, to be used in a particular discipline or profession or by a particular publisher.
subheading
A subdivision of a more general subject heading. For example in the Library of Congress Subject
Heading United States--History, History is a subheading of United States.
subject heading
A term or phrase used in indexes and library catalogs to describe the content of library materials
in a standardized way. For example, Indians of North America is the subject heading used in the
online catalog to describe materials about Native Americans. See also thesaurus and keywords.
SuDocs (Superintendent of Documents)
The classification scheme used by the U.S. Superintendent of Documents. Used to create call
numbers for most U.S. government documents received at the Illinois Library since 1980.
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table of contents
A list of parts contained within a book or periodical, such as chapter titles and periodical articles,
with references by page number or other location symbol to the place they begin and in the
sequence in which they appear. (ALA Glossary)
telephone center
A service which will search, request, and renew library materials for you--call 333-8400. Also
called the Phone Center.
tertiary sources
Reference works that identify, point out, summarize, abstract, or repackage the information
provided in primary and secondary sources. Examples include dictionaries, encyclopedias,
handbooks, etc. (Oxford Guide to Library Research, 1998)
A free one-to-one service offered to students in the Undergraduate Library each semester.
Assistance in choosing topics, finding sources, using the online catalog, and footnoting is
provided.
thesaurus
A list of all the subject headings or descriptors used in a particular database, catalog, or index.
The thesaurus for the online catalog is the Library of Congress Subject Headings. See also
controlled vocabulary.
thesis
truncation
In database searching, the addition of a special symbol (*, #, ?, etc.) to the root of a word to
match any record in a database that begins with the letters to the left of the symbol. For example
in the online catalog, typing forest? as an expert keyword search would find records containing
the words forest, forestry, forests, forested, etc.
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-U-
unbound volumes
Current, individual issues of a periodical title that are not yet gathered together as a hardback
volume.
uniform title
The title used for cataloging purposes when a work has appeared under more than one title (such
as translations into several languages), or when the work being cataloged is of a collective
nature, such as "Complete Works."
Publications produced by the United Nations. These documents are housed in the Government
Documents Library and in the Main Stacks.
URL
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-V-
vertical file
A file cabinet or file box containing a collection of pamphlets, newspaper clippings, or other
small published items.
volume
Contains the total collection of all sequential issues of a periodical or newspaper over a given
time period.
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withdrawn
A client-server information system that uses the Internet to access computers containing millions
of hypertext documents.
Writers' Workshop
Free one-to-one assistance in all facets of composition provided by tutors. Located in Room 251
of the Undergraduate Library (333-8796). Services are available by appointment or on a walk-in
basis.
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-X-
Xerox
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-Y-
yearbook
An annual compendium of facts and statistics on a particular subject for the preceding year.
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-Z-
Z39.50
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