New Proposals for the Design of Integrated Online Wine Industry Dictionaries

The specialised lexicographic treatment of oenology and viticulture usually consists in the compiling of articles describing the language of wine in general language dictionaries, or presenting professional knowledge of wine in specialised multi-field dictionaries and encyclopedias. This treatment also encompasses the terminological compilation of single field dictionaries describing the language and/or knowledge of wine. Lexicographically speaking, all this is but a fraction of the complete picture. Indeed, the specialised lexicography of oenology and viticulture is multifaceted and goes far beyond the above-mentioned types of articles and dictionaries. It includes a broad range of both online and printed lexicographically structured information tools, such as wine guides, atlases, companions, oenological websites, and mobile applications. In line with this growing interest for lexicographically structured information tools on oenology, wine making, and wine tasting, this article argues for an expansion of lexicography dealing with wine: It explains how a new lexicographic information tool, in this case OENOLEX Burgundy, a French monolingual online wine dictionary commissioned by the Burgundian wine industry, offers various functions and usage modes to its users, including access to multimodal data, and how it differs from a comparable South African online wine dictionary commissioned by the South African wine industry. In line with the findings of this comparative study, lexicographic proposals are subsequently formulated. The first proposal is that such online wine industry dictionaries should be developed in accordance with specific user situations and needs, and make use of a monofunctional design and an adaptive user interface. The second proposal is that such online wine industry dictionaries should not stand alone, as they could benefit from a full integration with the websites of the wine industry, and consequently transform into genuine lexicographic information tools.


1.
Introduction: The specialised lexicography of oenology and viticulture within the user needs paradigm As a subject field, wine represents the world's universal cultural heritage. In terms of economy, it is an influential industry representing a large number of stakeholders such as wine growers, wine makers, and wine merchants. As an object of consumption, wine is probably becoming one of the most popular lifestyle-determined subjects of interest and curiosity in the minds of global hyperconsumers of today (Lipovetsky 2006). Paper-based wine dictionaries (DLV 2007), wine encyclopedias, wine atlases, wine companions and wine guides (GHV 2010) have become increasingly popular and are now being rapidly replaced by online resources, such as professional online wine dictionaries (Winetech and Sawis 2012), huge encyclopedic articles and portals (Wikipedia 2013), and online wine guides (GHV 2013), to name just a few. The transition from the paper form and the main principles of online lexicography have been thoroughly described in Granger and Paquot (2012), Fuertes-Olivera and Bergenholtz (2011a and 2011b), Tarp (2012) and Fuertes-Olivera and Tarp (2014), all of whom advocate user-oriented solutions based on user needs. Also, the Internet as a prolific source of information on wine provides access to a vast number of word lists, glossaries, and online wine dictionaries of varying quality. The development of mobile information technologies for smartphones has led to a vast expansion of the volume and types of data which users look for to satisfy their information needs. It has also brought about a multiplication of access modes (Leroyer 2011;Leroyer and Gouws 2009). A smartphone App such as Drync Wine Free and Pro (2013) gives fast and easy access to information about 1,2 million wines, 100.000 score cards written by wine tasting oenologists, and a plethora of oenological information, including advice on how to buy wine and virtually manage one's own wine cellar. Common to all these information resources, perhaps with the exception of the Drync wine App, is the fact that they seem to privilege a subject field perspective rather than the user needs perspective. In other words, it seems that the presentation of data supporting communication about wine or knowledge of wine per se tends to become the aim of the resource. The process of data selection is normally guided by a description of wine as a subject field, or a range of major subject-fields and a large number of associated subfields. From a functional perspective, and in line with Fuertes Olivera and Tarp (2014), one should think that compiling a wine dictionary should start with an analysis of the social situations in which information needs about wine can lead to the consultation of specific kinds of wine dictionaries or other wine-related lexicographic information tools. This calls for an approach based on user needs and user situations, one in which lexicographic functions have a major role to play. Should the tool help its intended users to communicate about wine, to acquire knowledge of wine, to interpret non-verbal signs and codes such as the complex information provided by wine labels, or to carry out wine-related mental and physical operations, such as wine tasting? The implementation of the functions should start with the lexicographic identification of the unique social situations which are characteristic of the information society, then analyze the complex of specific information problems and information needs related to these situations, and determine the extent to which potential information needs arising from the situations can be met and gratified by a lexicographic information tool. In many cases, the lexicographic situation will only have been partly, if at all, recognised as such before.
This article consists of three parts. First, it presents the Function Theory of specialised lexicography and confirms the pre-eminence of the social situation in the extra-lexicographic world. Second, a South African online wine industry dictionary is reviewed as a case of a predominantly subject-field-based dictionary, and proposals for improvement are made. Third, a new user-situation-and user-need-based dictionary of wine, currently under construction, is presented, and new proposals for the development of online wine dictionaries in general are finally formulated. Although different in scope, the two online dictionaries share the same functions, which is to help users in training situations.
The basic lexicographic methodology underlying the present research was previously introduced in Leroyer (2008 and2011), and in Gouws and Leroyer (2009) (regarding the transformation of guides into lexicographic information tools), and in Leroyer and Gouws (2009) (regarding the compilation of a new kind of website integrated online wine guide and dictionary).
In conclusion, it is claimed that user-based specialised lexicography taking the specific wine-related social situations as a point of departure for dictionary design and dictionary compiling could have a substantial impact on the development of integrated online wine industry dictionaries of tomorrow.

The lexicographic functions of specialised dictionaries
There are four basic elements that constitute the core of the Function Theory of lexicography (Fuertes-Olivera and Tarp 2014;Tarp 2008a and2008b). Dictionaries and other lexicographic tools are built to satisfy punctual information needs. As tools, they have functions which are essential to their genesis and to their use. According to Bergenholtz and Tarp 2010, a lexicographic function is defined as: (a) the satisfaction (through the selection and presentation of easily accessible data) (b) of the specific types of lexicographically relevant needs that may arise (c) in a specific type of potential user (d) in a specific type of extra-lexicographic situation.
Information needs are lexicographically relevant in so far as they can be satisfied by consultation. Bergenholtz and Tarp (2010: 30) state: Not all situations are relevant for lexicography; only situations in which needs may arise that can be satisfied by consulting dictionaries. This statement should actually be slightly modified by adding: and other lexicographic information tools. Accordingly, the lexicographer's task is to pinpoint the specific user needs in the specific use-situations, and to establish the user profiles. This analysis should lead to the design of a unique dictionary concept, in which selection and presentation of easily accessible data will lead to the satisfaction of the needs. User-based specialised lexicography begins by acknowledging the primacy of the situation. A definition of lexicography could thus be that it is a discipline dedicated to the construction of functional lexicographic information tools for the satisfaction of information needs in specific types of social situations in the extra-lexicographic world, combining types of social situations, types of user needs, and types of users. The primacy of the social situation can then lead to the invention of new lexicographic concepts and the development of corresponding functional configurations, the implementation of innovative data selection and presentation principles with integrated solutions, and the implementation of innovative access options on multiple platforms and termi-nals, including mobile solutions.
From a functional perspective, subject-based specialised lexicography normally includes three fundamental, major steps: (a) In the recognition phase, the lexicographer takes the recognition of a preexisting subject-field and associated subfields as a point of departure (cf. Bergenholtz and Kaufmann 1997).
(b) In the transformation phase, the lexicographer critically transforms existing subject-field-based dictionary concepts into new ones by applying adequate lexicographic functions.
(c) Finally, in the implementation phase, the lexicographer compiles a lexicographic information tool according to the functions.
Situation-based specialised lexicography is also characterised by three fundamental steps, but the point of departure is the social situation itself, i.e. the user needs, not the subject-field: (a) In the identification phase, the specialised lexicographer takes the identification of a unique social situation as a point of departure.
(b) In the invention phase, the specialised lexicographer can invent new configurations of the lexicographic functions.
(c) Finally, in the innovation phase, the lexicographer can compile an innovative lexicographic tool taking advantage of the new functional configurations.
The above stated two sets of lexicographic principles -subject based and situation based -will now be applied in the comparative study of two online wine industry dictionaries in the following sections.

Subject-field-based wine industry dictionary: The SAWIS South African Trilingual Dictionary of Wine
The South African Trilingual Wine Industry Dictionary -SATWID (Winetech and SAWIS 2013) is an online wine industry dictionary of oenology and viticulture. It contains the central wine terminology used by the South African wine industry and covers numerous subject fields and subfields related to wine. All terms are lemmatised in English and translated into Afrikaans and Xhosa. The terminology of wine tasting, for instance, includes 228 entries. All terms are provided with subject field labels indicating the specific field or subfield to which they belong. For example, the subject field "viticulture" includes a number of subfields, such as "organic growth and production", "soil science", "plant biotechnology", "vine viruses" and "plant improvement". The subject field "oenology" encompasses the terminology of production technology, bottling, packaging and distribution, as well as microbiology. This subject field approach is confirmed by a subject-field-based access to data through the list of subject fields: By clicking on a specific subject field label/link from the list in the right panel, users can get access to the complete list of terms included in the field. Linguistic information, including information on part of speech is also provided, but only in English so far. It is foreseen that the information will also be provided in Afrikaans and Xhosa at a later stage of the project. The metalexicographic description of SATWID, i.e. the introduction and instructions, seems to contain a number of inconsistencies as far as user profiles, target users, and functions are concerned. According to the compilers of the dictionary, one of its purposes is to assist its intended users in learning situations in order to fulfil their educational needs: Emerging producers and people who do not have training or a background in the industry can be assisted by this dictionary. It fulfils a training and introductory function and can fulfil the educational needs of the user with explanations of terms that are used in the industry.
In line with Fata (2010), one should expect then that the SATWID should make provision for assistance in connection with cognitive situations, as knowledge acquisition is the central element of any training program (see also Fuertes-Olivera 2010). However, the SATWID is defined as communication-oriented, and no mention at all is made of cognitive functions: The dictionary is multi-functional, i.e. it can be used for text production, text reception and text translation.
Whereas the intended users, in accordance with the genuine purpose of the dictionary, are clearly identified as semi-experts in the background information on the dictionary: Emerging producers and people who do not have training or a background in the industry, the actual users are said to consist of both experts (the first four categories listed below) and semi-experts (the following five ones); moreover, wine lovers probably belong in many cases to the category of lay people: Viticulturists and oenologists, producers and wine makers, viticulture and oenology students and lecturers, public relations officers and information officers, wine marketers, wine writers, wine lovers.
These users have very different profiles and are engaged in a large number of various social situations related to wine (wine growing, wine making, learning about wine, promoting wine, selling wine, writing about wine -or simply being interested in wine in general and having a desire for information in the case of wine lovers), in which lexicographic information needs can arise. It might be feared then than the fulfilment of the lexicographic aims cannot be achieved, because the different user profiles have basically very different lexicographic information needs owing to their diverging background, general culture and level of knowledge, and because they are engaged in radically different user situations. The functional shortage of the SATWID is probably due to a systematic, subject-based approach, which must have been commissioned by the industry for which the dictionary is a tool of interlingual communication and standardisation. The dictionary is not really user-based; it is a list of expert words for experts of different fields. As for language planning purposes, including terminologisation patterns and solutions (for Xhosa), text production and translation, the data prove clearly insufficient. Grammatical information is limited to parts of speech, and the dictionary does not offer any information on collocations. Only terms of the wine industry are lemmatised in English and translated into Afrikaans and Xhosa (English white wine, Afrikaans witwyn, Xhosa iwayini emhlophe), although a small number of culture-dependent items are also included, such as wine route (see below).
The article presented below illustrates one of the basic problems of the subject-based approach. The meaning of the lemma wine route is categorized and specified by the label 'commerce', but strangely enough not by the label 'wine tourism' or 'oenotourism', which would be much more appropriate. Besides, no references are made to South African wine routes, so the information value of the article is limited for those users who participate in a wine training program and definitely need such information to acquire knowledge of this crucial aspect of the South African wine industry and wine culture. One of the most striking features of the SATWID is the fact that the lexicographic data are largely generic (according to its compilers: 'physiology and fruit of the vine, winemaking processes') in so far as they are subject-fieldbased. The data are not really specific to South Africa, apart from the fact that the dictionary consists of English lemmas and articles translated into Afrikaans and Xhosa. As such, the SATWID can be effectively used for language planning purposes, included standardisation, but there seems to be paradoxically very little specific South African information in it: For instance, it does not provide any encyclopedic information on South African varieties of grapes (Bukettraube, Cape Riesling, Hanepoot, Roobernet, or Pinotage, the local cross between Pinot Noir and Cinsaut, which is unique to South Africa) nor on any other crucial cultural aspects of viticulture (ethical trade, history, soils, climates, wine of origin legislation). The SATWID offers a link in the right panel, List of varieties >>, but this link unfortunately does not give direct access to the list. The access is unnecessarily intricate. Users have to click on a series of various links and pick up the right heading in the navigation panel before they finally can open a PDF document included in a wine-of-origin scheme with all varieties. The varieties should have been lemmatised in the first place.
On the basis of this short review of the SATWID, it is hereby proposed to: (a) expand, in line with recommendations formulated by Carstensen (1989) and Leroyer and Bergenholtz (2014), the lemma list with culture bound words and expressions which are truly constitutive of the South African wine industry and its unique wine culture; this would include, e.g., the lemmatisation of grape varieties, wine routes, estates, etc. The above recommendations, which fall into the categories of data selection (more specific data for the foreseen user-situations), access to the data (faster and easier access to the data), and multimodal data (integration of the homepage), would contribute to transform the SATWID, which at present is a predominantly subject-field based dictionary, into a truly user-situation based dictionary.

User-situation-based wine dictionary: OENOLEX Burgundy
OENOLEX Burgundy (OB) is an international lexicographic co-operation project between the University of Burgundy in Dijon (France) and Aarhus University (Denmark). The project was commissioned by the BIVB (VDB 2013), the branch organisation of the Burgundy wine industry. The goal of the BIVB was to develop an information tool aimed at the promotion of communication and knowledge about Burgundy wine. More precisely, the decision was made to develop a lexicographic information tool aimed at the information needs of its intended users, in this case sommelier (wine waiter) students and other students following wine tasting courses at the Burgundy wine school. OB was originally commissioned by the BIVB as a so-called nuancier lexicographique, meaning a kind of lexicographic 'colour card' of terms, expressions, and other codes used by the Burgundy wine industry in connection with wine tasting. No matter how strange it may sound for the designation of a lexicographic information tool, what was needed was a lexicographic information tool, no matter what it was called, in line with the statements of Fuertes-Olivera and Tarp (2014): Specialised lexicographical works may be published under a whole range of different names such as dictionary, encyclopaedia, encyclopaedic dictionary, lexicon, vocabulary, glossary, terminological database, knowledge bank, resource, tool, etc. At the end of the day, it is not these names but the functions of the respective products that determine whether or not they can be considered specialised lexicographical works.
OB includes four types of user situations, all related to wine tasting situations, and their related information needs: (a) Cognitive situations in which the intended users need to acquire knowledge on the act of wine tasting itself, on the language used to verbalise this act, including knowledge on relations between categories of wine tasting concepts, or on the knowledge of the wine being tasted in order to contextualise the tasting experience.
(b) Communicative situations in which the intended users need assistance in connection with the reception or production of oral texts about wine tasting. The lexicographic challenge here is to provide alternative access routes to the data, so that the user can verbalise their subjective experience of wine tasting properties, one of the main objectives of the teaching being to acquire the competences necessary to make a professional evaluation of the wine.
(c) Operative situations in which the intended user needs assistance in order to perform the operation of wine tasting.
(d) Interpretive situations in which the intended users need assistance in order to interpret the types of legal and commercial information printed on the labels of the wine bottles being tasted; the Burgundy wine industry makes use of a very intricate system of "appellations" and "climats" and "lieux dits" † .
Wine tasting evaluation is the result of three phases, which are based on three distinctive sensory experiences: visual, olfactory, and gustatory evaluations. In the following section, the four types of user situations identified for OB are briefly presented, and the solutions chosen by the compilers of OB to satisfy user needs. Together, these solutions contribute to the realisation of the evaluative function, which is the genuine purpose of OB.

Communicative situations
In OB, the relevant communicative situations are wine tasting situations in which potential tasters of Burgundy wine are confronted with a reception or a production problem in an oral communication situation (to understand speech during a wine tasting lesson or presentation, or to produce an oral text and verbalise sensations in a professional way). All lexical units directly connected with the evaluative act of tasting Burgundy wines are lemmatised and provided with the following data fields, shown in Table 1   However, the lexicographic problem in connection with wine tasting is more complex. It is necessary to create access routes to resources that are not directly accessible through lemmas, as users (learners) do not (yet) know how to verbalise their evaluation. OB will provide a systematic access to lists of relevant wine tasting items, making it possible, for instance, to redirect the search from basic colours to multiple colour shades, from basic fragrances to detailed fragrances, including the evaluation of qualities and faults, or from specific wines to their characteristics. Access is made possible through the systematic organisation of wine tasting concepts, each concept (here floral in table 2 below) being linked to classes of concepts, and to specific wines. The user can also click on the wine itself in order to be re-routed to the website itself, which contains full descriptions of the specific wines (a, b, c, d, e

Cognitive situations
It appears from a close study of course descriptions at the École des vins de Bourgogne (2013) that knowledge involved in wine tasting is complex and can be divided into five types: declarative knowledge, schematic knowledge, procedural knowledge, experiential knowledge, and ultimately, evaluative knowledge.
Declarative knowledge encompasses knowledge of the identity of the wine (status of the 'appellation contrôlée', position of the vineyard, varieties of grapes used, kind of vinification, ranking of the vintage and evolution in time, etc.). OB collects these data and addresses them to toponymic lemmas. All types of 'appellations contrôlées' (Regional, Villages, Premiers Crus, Grands Crus) as well as individual producers are lemmatised. All tasting characteristics are registered, and linking to wine tasting tutorials is provided:

Chablis grand cru Visual
White: pure green-gold in colour, evolving to a light yellow with age. A wine with fine keeping properties (10-15 years, sometimes more).

Nose
Intense mineral scents (flint) but with room for lime-flowers, dried fruits, almond and a discreet touch of honey. Field mushroom gives a strongly characteristic touch to this wine.

Palate
On the palate, acidity and fat are in perfect balance, as are liveliness and dryness. It has all the charm of an inimitable and authentic wine.

Global evaluation
This is the jewel in the crown of the chablis range, richly nuanced by variations in "climat". Table 4: Data addressed to specific wines Schematic knowledge encompasses knowledge of relations between wine tasting terms and regions, appellations, and specific wines. In OB, assistance is provided by wine tasting data being addressed to specific wines (cf. table 3 and 4 above).

Link to wine tasting instruction video (tutorials) on the website of BIVB
Procedural knowledge is the knowledge of the act of wine tasting itself: choice of the right type of glass, quantity of wine to be poured in it, serving temperature, etc. OB lemmatises all keywords connected to this kind of knowledge. Access will be supported by organising the data allowing systematic access through searches via keywords and table of contents (cf. table 5).
Since experiential knowledge is gained through personal experience, this type of knowledge cannot be represented in OB. OB cannot explain what it feels like to experience wine tasting, because tasting is such a complex and individual sensory experience. It might be argued, however, that the use of OB supports the gathering of experience, and hereby the acquisition of experiential knowledge.
Evaluative knowledge is the ultimate competence needed for wine tasting, and also the educational goal. It involves a range of cognitive processes in which the students become gradually capable of evaluating the wines: appraising, assessing, comparing and contrasting, criticising, grading, interpreting, and ranking them.

Interpretive functions
In OB, the relevant interpretive situations are situations in which the intended user needs help in a wine tasting situation in order to interpret information and information conventions printed on the label. This information, regulated by law, also contains a commercial dimension (promotion of wine) and is extremely complex in Burgundy. It is planned that OB would provide direct access to the interpretation of wine labels using visual recognition software and make it available on smartphones. This will be achieved by the indexing of wine label data, both as generic data (for the recognition and interpretation of the main types of appellations) and as specific data (for the recognition of specific wines and wine growers).

Operative situations
Operative situations are situations in which the intended user needs immediate assistance to carry on the act of wine tasting. The data includes online instructions, recommendations, etc., and is presented in the form of an online wine tasting multimodal manual (texts and videos). Access is obtained through table of contents, questions and answers, and an indexation of related keywords, as shown in Table 5

Dual access mode in OB
Online wine dictionaries like the wine glossary of VDB 2013 demonstrate two kinds of access to the data, namely consultation and navigation. Consultation, i.e. making queries to search and retrieve the data, is the default mode of dictionary use. Consultation is aimed at the appropriation of data, while navigation is aimed at the exploration of data. Navigation, in which the user follows hyperlinks to navigate between articles and pages, is normally the privilege of online dictionaries, but it should be noticed that it is also possible to navigate in paper dictionaries (Nau 2007), mainly by following internal links to other articles or to outer texts, or by simply reading articles for pleasure as a kind of lexicotainment.

Consultation
The consultation mode is characterised by the "I search" user behaviour. Consultation is motivated by a problem-based information need and aimed at the search for a solution to the encountered problem. The lexicographic relevance lies in the satisfaction of the information need. The point of departure of the search lies in a pre-formulated query. For instance, when a reader of a text on wine making encounters the term "astringency" the meaning of which is unclear them, they can make a search in the glossary on the VDB website, either analogically (through the alphabetic macrostructure of the glossary) or digitally (by typing the term in the query window and launching the search engine, which will return the information from the database). Consultation is goal-oriented because it is always aimed at getting a specific answer. The number of access routes (marked out by means of data structuring devices) is also limited. The access perspective is ruled by the lexicographer in so far as the answer to the query is given beforehand. Consultation is a modus operandi in which information is retrieved from relevant data presentation. Consultation belongs to the functionalist paradigm of information science, in which success or failure of information searches is measured after the use of the dictionary. Hereby the capacity of the dictionary -or lack of it -to satisfy the needs and fulfil the function is also measured. OB is designed to allow for this type of access in the foreseen user situations.

Navigation
Navigation is the opposite of consultation. It is characterised by the "I do not search, I find" user behaviour and motivated by a pleasure-driven desire for information. In OB, it is achieved, as explained above, through the multiple interlinking of the dictionary itself (the database) and the website of the BIVB:  Relevance lies in the satisfaction of the curiosity which drives the user to explore the data. There is no pre-formulated query or point of departure. The data are structured into associative networks, with a potentially unlimited number of access routes, and the user exposes themselves to data retrieval through discoveries being made along these routes. Access is of the exploratory kind, as neither a goal nor a logical path is needed. Access is guided by links and headings on the website, and routes are subject to fortuitous encounters generating pleasure. Navigation is ruled by the user perspective, as the access process itself is central, including obstacles, diversions and dead ends that can tease the user's curiosity and redirect them. Navigation belongs to the constructivist paradigm of information. In OB, the functions involved in navigation are cognitive-oriented, as the purpose here is to acquire new knowledge, or to check on already existing knowledge in connection with wine tasting training programmes at the École des vins de Bourgogne.

Conclusion
In this article, it has been shown how an online subject-field-based wine dictionary (Van der Merwe 2008) could benefit from an expansion of its data and from integration with the resources of the websites of the South African wine industry. It could subsequently be transformed into an integrated information tool in order to satisfy even more efficiently the specific information needs of the intended user groups, particularly students and wine lovers. It has also been shown how a user-situation-based specialised lexicographic information tool, in this case OB, gathers multimodal data and provides monofunctional access to the data in order to satisfy the information needs of its intended users. Through integration with the website of the wine industry, OB offers a dual access mode -consultation and navigation -in order to help its users to get access to, or discover, the data that will help them learn how to verbalise the subtle nuances of wine tasting experience and to relate their knowledge of wine to the tasting itself in order to contextualise and enrich the experience. In this respect, OB is completely in line with what Béjoint (2010: 386) has in mind when predicting the transformation potential of online lexicography: Probably the dictionary as we know it is on its way out, and we will see the emergence of new kinds of tools, reference tools encompassing more than the dictionary, containing other kinds of information and providing a better treatment of the more traditional presentations.
OB is also in line with Prinsloo (2005: 11), who depicts this transformation even more accurately: The great capacity and speed characteristics of electronic products, combined with enhanced query and data retrieval technology, indeed pave the way to a new generation of dictionaries unimagined in the paper-dictionary era.
In co-operation with the professionals of the wine industry, a proposal is made here to design online wine industry dictionaries that are truly integrated into the websites of the wine industry, wine boards and authorities, or with the websites of providers of wine tourism experiences (wine routes, visit to estates etc.). Websites of wine industry and wine tourism are indeed characterised by user-situation-based content management systems aiming at the satisfaction of the heterogeneous information needs of wine students, customers, lovers, visitors, etc. On such websites, data selection -and presentation -is to a large extent ruled by a user-situation-based (read: customer-and market-oriented) strategy: who is interested, in what, for what reasons, when, and how -being the crucial questions that have been answered in order to cater for the needs of the intended user groups. Such websites are not only sources of inspiration for lexicographic innovation, but also valuable information resources that can directly contribute to developing the functional quality of online wine industry dictionaries. Finally, it is worth noticing that the lexicographic proposals formulated in this article are not specific to wine industry. They also apply, without limitations, to the development of lexicographically structured information tools in other kinds of industries, sectors of the economy, corporations, and businesses: banking, insurance, real estate, medicine, technology and engineering, tourism, etc. Naturally, data differ, and so do priorities given to the specific user-situations involved, but the overall lexicographic principles for the online integration of user-situation identification, data selection, data access and data presentation remain identical.
Note † As explained in the English version of VDB 2013: "The vineyard of Burgundy is made up of small plots known as climats and lieux-dits, pieced together like a mosaic. These give the Burgundy wine region its special character and rich diversity."

Literature
Dictionaries and other lexicographically structured information tools