Domain-Specific Human Language
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A Domain-Specific Human Language is a Human Language designed for communication between people within a particular Knowledge Domain.
- Context:
- It can (typically) be more precise than natural language within its domain.
- It can (typically) contains Specialized Vocabulary and Specialized Idioms tailored to the domain.
- It can (often) allows concise and precise expression of concepts within the domain.
- It can sacrifices general expressiveness for domain-specific expressiveness.
- It can be less expressive than natural language outside its domain.
- …
- Examples:
- Counter-Examples:
- An Everyday Language for general communication. such as: "I'm going to the store to buy some milk.".
- A Programming Language, designed for software systems.
- A Knowledge Representation Language for AI agents.
- See: Jargon, Terminology, Vocabulary, Formal Language.