The Dublin Core Metadata Element Set is a vocabulary of fifteen properties for use in resource description. The name "Dublin" is due to its origin at a 1995 invitational workshop in Dublin, Ohio; "core" because its elements are broad and generic, usable for describing a wide range of resources. @en
The DITA RDF ontology translates the semantics of a subset of the vocabulary described in the DITA 1.2 specification in a format that can be understood in the semantic Web of data. By Colin Maudry, licensed under the terms of the Unlicense (public domain). @en
an up-to-date specification of all metadata terms maintained by the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, including properties, vocabulary encoding schemes, syntax encoding schemes, and classes. @en
Draft for a recommendation for metadata on Representational Units (RU) which appear in ontologies. It is so far harmonized for implementation through owl annotation properties. @en
The Patch Request Ontology provides a schema to describe desired changes in Linked Data. By wrapping the Graph Update Ontology (guo) patch requests can be formulated to add, modify or delete particular triples (or subgraphs) within a dataset. @en
Vocabulary to include sample codes in a schema. Can work with XSLT (http://purl.org/net/ns/ns-schema.xsl) to present schema as XHTML list with examples. @en
The TSN-Change ontology aims at describing changes that occured from one version of a Territorial Statistical Nomenclature (TSN) (i.e., partition of the territory) and its subsequent (e.g., change in territorial units boundaries to reflect an administrative reorganisation). @en
The Extension of the Vocabulary of Interlinked Datasets (VoID) RDF Schema that includes the concept of virtual links. This extension enhances interoperability among heterogeneous and distributed RDF data sets by bridging them through explicitly defined virtual links. @en
The RECO ontology defines the vocabulary for representing preferences-as-constraints and preferences-as-ratings as RDF graphs. This lightweight vocabulary provides domain-independent means to describe user profiles in a coherent and context-aware way. RECO has been designed as an extension of both Friend-Of-A-Friend (FOAF) and Who Am I! (WAI) ontologies. @en