Navigator

A Theme for DokuWiki

User Tools

Site Tools


vocabulary:terminology_glossary_vs_vocabulary

Differences between Terminology Gloassary and Vocabulary

While these terms all relate to word usage, they differ in how they are structured and the specific purpose they serve.

Core Differences

  • Vocabulary: The broadest term, referring to the entire set of words known or used by a person, group, or within a language.
  • Terminology: A specialized subset of vocabulary used within a specific field (e.g., medical, legal, or technical) to ensure precise communication.
  • Glossary: A physical or digital list that provides definitions for specific terms, typically found at the end of a book or document to aid reader understanding.

Detailed Comparison

Feature Vocabulary Terminology Glossary
Nature A collection of words. A system of specialized terms. A list with definitions.
Scope General or personal;
covers all words one knows.
Professional;
specific to a discipline or industry.
Narrow; specific to a single
document or subject.
Primary
Goal
Communication in general context.Precision and consistency within a field.Clarification for the reader.
Format Abstract (mental set of words).Systemic (standardized usage).Structural (alphabetical list).

Key Distinctions

  • Managed vs. Unmanaged: Terminology is often “managed” by organizations to enforce consistency (e.g., deciding to use “select” instead of “click”). Vocabulary is generally unmanaged and grows naturally.
  • Words vs. Terms: In linguistics, “words” make up a vocabulary, while “terms” make up a terminology. A term can be a single word or a phrase with a very specific, restricted meaning.
  • Reference Utility: A glossary acts as a “mini-dictionary” for a specific text. While you might “have a large vocabulary,” you “consult a glossary” to understand a difficult word in a manual.
vocabulary/terminology_glossary_vs_vocabulary.txt · Last modified: by editor