sourcecommonly
Sourcecommonly is a neologism used in information science and collaborative knowledge bases to denote sources that are widely recognized and frequently referenced across multiple topics. In this usage, a source marked as sourcecommonly is regarded as a canonical or foundational reference that supports consistent citation and interoperability across articles and datasets.
Origin and adoption: The term emerged in online discussions and experimental metadata schemas in the 2010s
Definition in metadata design: In practical terms, sourcecommonly would be implemented as a flag or a controlled
Implications and criticism: Proponents argue that marking sources as sourcecommonly improves consistency and reduces duplication of
See also and notes: Canonical source, source credibility, metadata schema, citation standard. As a coined term,