different between mountweazel vs nihilartikel

mountweazel

mountweazel From the web:



nihilartikel

English

Etymology

Considered a loan word from German; Latin nihil (nothing) and German Artikel (article); from a fictitious March 2004 English-language Wikipedia article, referencing a September 2003 article in the German-language Wikipedia now titled Fingierter Lexikonartikel

Pronunciation

Noun

nihilartikel (plural nihilartikels)

  1. A deliberately fictitious entry in an encyclopedia or academic work, generally identifiable as false, usually included to brand the intellectual property so copies can be identified.
    • 2005 May 1, Eve Maler, “The Language Log”, Pushing String, at www.xmlgrrl.com [1]
      The post never does find the word it’s looking for, but it eventually alights on a discussion of the Nihilartikel, a fake dictionary or encyclopedia entry created for playful or copyright-trap reasons.
    • 2005 December 18, Tom Anderson, “Putney Green”, uk.transport.london, Usenet
      There are also fake entries in dictionaries and encyclopedias, known as nihilartikels, which serve the same purpose.

Synonyms

  • (deliberately fictitious entry): Mountweazel

Hypernyms

  • copyright trap

See also

  • trap street

References

  • 2006 June, David C. Hay, Data Model Patterns: A Metadata Map, glossory, page 370, Morgan Kaufmann

nihilartikel From the web:

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