wear (Q110): Difference between revisions
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Antaldaniel (talk | contribs) Changed [en] description: Wear is a subclass of activity (CIDOC-CRM), representing the intentional and temporally-bounded act of donning, using, or displaying garments or clothing in various contexts. It encompasses habitual, ceremonial, professional, and situational practices of wearing attire, including daily wear, festive clothing, uniforms, and ritual dress. This class captures the act of wearing as a cultural and social activity, often influenced by function, identity, tradition, o... |
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| description / en | description / en | ||
wearing | Wear is a subclass of activity (CIDOC-CRM), representing the intentional and temporally-bounded act of donning, using, or displaying garments or clothing in various contexts. It encompasses habitual, ceremonial, professional, and situational practices of wearing attire, including daily wear, festive clothing, uniforms, and ritual dress. This class captures the act of wearing as a cultural and social activity, often influenced by function, identity, tradition, or regulation. | ||
Revision as of 22:23, 16 March 2025
Wear is a subclass of activity (CIDOC-CRM), representing the intentional and temporally-bounded act of donning, using, or displaying garments or clothing in various contexts. It encompasses habitual, ceremonial, professional, and situational practices of wearing attire, including daily wear, festive clothing, uniforms, and ritual dress. This class captures the act of wearing as a cultural and social activity, often influenced by function, identity, tradition, or regulation.
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | wear |
Wear is a subclass of activity (CIDOC-CRM), representing the intentional and temporally-bounded act of donning, using, or displaying garments or clothing in various contexts. It encompasses habitual, ceremonial, professional, and situational practices of wearing attire, including daily wear, festive clothing, uniforms, and ritual dress. This class captures the act of wearing as a cultural and social activity, often influenced by function, identity, tradition, or regulation. |