International Electrotechnical Vocabulary
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International Electrotechnical Vocabulary
Summary
International Electrotechnical Vocabulary is a measurement standard[1]. It draws 18 Wikipedia views per month (measurement_standard category, ranking #5 of 5).[2]
Key Facts
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's instance of is recorded as measurement standard[3].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's instance of is recorded as specialized terminology[4].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's instance of is recorded as nomenclature[5].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's publisher is recorded as International Electrotechnical Commission[6].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's subclass of is recorded as specialized terminology[7].
- +1938-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of International Electrotechnical Vocabulary[8].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/011q9yr1[9].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's official website is recorded as http://www.electropedia.org/[10].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's main subject is recorded as electrical engineering[11].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's standards body is recorded as International Electrotechnical Commission[12].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's main Wikidata property is recorded as P8855[13].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's short name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'IEV'}[14].
- International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's BARTOC ID is recorded as 1514[15].
Body
Authorship and Creation
International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's publisher is recorded as International Electrotechnical Commission[6].
Subject and Themes
International Electrotechnical Vocabulary's main subject is recorded as electrical engineering[11].
Why It Matters
International Electrotechnical Vocabulary draws 18 Wikipedia views per month (measurement_standard category, ranking #5 of 5).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[16] It is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[17]