entramado
grid ; mesh [meshes, -pl.] ; lattice ; web ; nexus ; skein ; lacework ; trellis pattern ; trellis ; trellis work.
Each card has a grid covering most of the body of the card which provides for the coding of document numbers.
Wholly new forms of encyclopedias will appear, ready-made with a mesh of associative trails running through them, ready to be dropped into the memex and there amplified.
Special attention should be given to Figure 2, which proposes two lattices (or ladders) for career movement in libraries.
A child may find through reading a book that a dull day is transformed because he has met a talking pig and a spider that can write in 'Charlotte's web'.
The future OPAC is likely to be one building block in a larger nexus of information structures.
Unbridled photocopying will lead to the imminent demise of the communications skein.
Beguiling as the show is, it perhaps lacks major impact because it has taken elements from lacework and painting in such a way as to avoid the fundamental challenges of both.
The bracelet is decorated with a trellis pattern containing frontal human heads, birds, hares and fruit.
As humans began the colonization of the Old World tropics, they evolved a trellis of interrelationships across a broad geographical range.
For such designs he introduced many features from early English gardens - raised flower beds, terraces, and trellis work.
entramado de alambre
wire mesh
The water of the stuff poured into the middle of the cylinder through its wire-mesh cover, and was immediately pumped out from one end leaving a film of fibres on the surface.
entramado social, el
social web, the
He concludes that ceremonious leave-taking was a means of ensuring that the social web did not rupture when the spirit of adventure took hold.