...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
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Some works of fiction are named after professional terms. The terms used may have only tangential relation to the actual content of the work and be there courtesy of Rule of Cool, or be major plot points. This type of title tells the audience that the makers of the film know what they're talking about (whether or not this is actually the case). Compare Mad Lib Thriller Title, which often invokes the same effect, and Literary Allusion Title, which takes another approach to sounding intelligent. Ominous Legal Phrase Title is a law-based subtrope. |
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Dropped link to BackdoorPilot: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Dropped link to DeadlyEuphemism: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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π: A mathematical constant whose value is the ratio of any circle's circumference to its diameter in the Euclidean plane. | |
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π | hasFeature |
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CSI: NY: As a science-based Police Procedural with a military protagonist, it has a number of episodes with these titles referring to those things (as well as others): "On the Job": Police terminology to let fellow officers know one is working undercover. One such officer is killed in the line of duty during the episode. "Necrophilia Americana": The scientific term for the flesh eating beetles found devouring a victim. "Charge of This Post": Taken from the first of the 11 Marine Corps General Orders, "To take charge of this post and all government property in view." Det. Mac Taylor is a former Marine; the perp has delusions of being a member of the Corps. "Personal Foul": Basketball term for illegal personal contact. The first victim is killed at a basketball game. "Turbulence": Term for unstable conditions during flight. The first victim is killed on board a plane bound from NYC to Washington, D.C. "Yahrzeit": Hebrew ceremony marking the anniversary of a loved one's death; one is held at the end of the episode. "Manhattanhenge": Term coined by astrophysicist Neil Degrasse Tyson for sunrises and sunsets aligning with Manhattan's street grid twice a year. The episode's events take place on the winter occurrence of the phenomena. "Hide Sight": Term for a sniper's hideout. A sniper kills two random people in downtown NYC. "Officer Involved": Police term for an officer firing their weapon, often with fatal results. Happens in the episode. "The Ripple Effect": Ripple Effect Theory explains a series of consequences resulting from a single action, much like ripples flowing outward when a stone is dropped into a pond. Here, a series of crimes and deaths occur as the result of one stolen bicycle. "Kill Screen": Gaming term for a bug or other malfunction preventing game play. A murder occurs at a Gears of War 3 convention. "Command+P": Keyboard shortcut for printing. Someone manages to 3-D print a handgun which is then used in two murders. |
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Half-Life 2's soundtrack titles also contain a few instances: "CP Violation" (also a reference to the in-game Civil Protection police force), "Calabi-Yau Model", "Broken Symmetry", "Kaon", "LG Orbifold", "Dark Energy". | |
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Boiler Room: Financial-services industry term for a brokerage firm that specializes in defrauding unwitting customers. | |
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Boiler Room | hasFeature |
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Half-Life: The amount of time it takes for half of a given substance with a limited lifespan to decay (typically used for radioactive decay). The original Half-Life also uses this for its expansions specifically with physics related terms, although it does manage to make a Multiple Reference Pun out of them sometimes; Blue Shift: Both a reference to the effect the Doppler shift has on light being emitted from objects approaching you, and the name of the work shift that falls under Barney's duties. Opposing Force is a two-fer: a reference to Newton's laws, and to an "opposing force" used in military simulations. Half-Life 2's soundtrack titles also contain a few instances: "CP Violation" (also a reference to the in-game Civil Protection police force), "Calabi-Yau Model", "Broken Symmetry", "Kaon", "LG Orbifold", "Dark Energy". |
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Arrested Development: An inability to mature, physically or mentally/emotionally.note Also a pun, as it focuses on a family that ostensibly got its money from property development, and the main action of the show is what happens after the patriarch of the family gets arrested. | |
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Manifest: Every episode, and the show itself, is named after a term used in aviation or the airline industry. | |
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Manifest | hasFeature |
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The Theory of Everything: A putative theory of theoretical physics that fully explains and links together all known physical phenomena, and predicts the outcome of any experiment that could be carried out in principle. | |
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The Theory of Everything | hasFeature |
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SubZero: Means "beneath zero". As such, it is usually used for negative numbers, especially with regards to temperature. | |
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Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero | hasFeature |
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Drop Zone: The area above and around a location where a parachutist jumps and expects to land. | |
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Drop Zone | hasFeature |
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Irreconcilable Differences: A reason cited to dissolve a legally formalized relationship (usually a marriage, but in the film a parent-child relationship). | |
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Irreconcilable Differences | hasFeature |
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Supernova: A stellar explosion that is more energetic than a nova, primarily because it is the death of a massive star. | |
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The Big Bang Theory: The theory of the start of the universe. | |
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The Big Bang Theory | hasFeature |
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Terminal Velocity: The maximum speed a falling object can attain. | |
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Terminal Velocity (1994) | hasFeature |
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Grand Theft Auto: The legal term for the theft of a motor vehicle in some jurisdictions (also used as a film title). | |
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Grand Theft Auto (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Synchronicity by The Police: In Jungian psychoanalysis, the possibility that two apparently coincident contemporaneous occurrences can hold some deeper meaning. | |
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Synchronicity (Music) | hasFeature |
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The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd: Refers literally to the hemisphere of the Moon that is not currently lit by the sun, or figuratively to the "far side": the hemisphere that is permanently turned away from Earth. | |
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The Dark Side of the Moon (Music) | hasFeature |
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Pitch Perfect: Sensitive to or having exactly the right tone or style. | |
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Pitch Perfect | hasFeature |
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InCryptid: Imaginary Numbers and Calculated Risks are math terms, appropriate for the Good with Numbers narrator Sarah's Day in the Limelight books. | |
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InCryptid | hasFeature |
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Intolerable Cruelty is another term denoting specific grounds for divorce. | |
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Intolerable Cruelty | hasFeature |
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Quantum Leap: Atomic electron transition or similar transitions between quantum states, which are scientific phenomena. | |
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The Elemental Chess Trilogy, a series of Fullmetal Alchemist fics, runs on this trope. Each major installment and its chapters follow a titling theme of this nature, and each chapter opens with a definition of the title. Some are just used because they sound neat, but others actually have some connection to the action of the chapter in question. Flowers of Antimony: A compound used in paints and flameproofing; also formerly used as an expectorant and emetic. Also called antimony oxide. Brilliancy: A spectacular and beautiful game of chess, generally featuring sacrificial attacks and unexpected moves. The Game of Three Generals: A variant of shoginote Japanese chess in which each player has three Generals, which command different sections of the 'army.' Triumvirate: A group of three people who work together, especially when they are in charge of something. Chronology: The science of measuring time. |
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Elemental Chess Trilogy / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes: "Probable Cause": What law enforcement in the U.S. must demonstrate to legally search something under most circumstances, per the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. "Rules of Engagement": The conditions under which military forces may use force towards the enemy, and what degree of force they may use. |
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | hasFeature |
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H₂O: Just Add Water: H2O is the scientific representation of water molecules. | |
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H₂O: Just Add Water | hasFeature |
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Mass Effect. Though the scientific term is fictional, the tone is unmistakable, especially since said term is named after a real though largely unrelated one ("mass defect", the incredibly small loss of mass lost when a process converts some of a mass to energy). | |
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Fallout: The residual radiation hazard from a nuclear explosion. | |
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Fallout | hasFeature |
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Source Code: Text written in computer programming language. | |
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Full Metal Jacket: A shell of a harder material around the lead in a bullet. | |
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The My Hero Academia fanfic Parallax receives its name from an optical distortion —the apparent offset of a foreground object against the background when your perspective changes. | |
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The Black Hole: A region of space from which nothing, not even light, can escape. | |
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The Black Hole | hasFeature |
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Fahrenheit 451 - The temperature at which paper burns. | |
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Fahrenheit 451 | hasFeature |
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CSI: Miami episodes that fit this trope: "MIA/NYC Nonstop": Airline terminology for a direct flight from Miami to New York City. This is the Back Door Pilot for CSI: NY in which Horatio Caine enlists the help of Mac Taylor to apprehend a killer operating in both their cities. "Pro Per": Legal shorthand for the Latin phrase, "in propria persona," used to describe a defendant representing himself at trial. A former inmate who spent his incarceration studying law does just this after being arrested for another crime. "10-7": Police code for being "out of service" or otherwise unavailable. One undercover officer surfaces, only to disappear again, and two others leave the team. "Double Jeopardy": Legal term meaning that once someone has been tried and found innocent, they cannot be retried for the same offense. After a man whose wife has been missing for years is acquitted of her murder, her body turns up and evidence now points to his guilt. What's the team to do? "Collateral Damage": Originally a military term, but it's use has expanded into other fields; meaning unintentional injury, death, etc. to individuals or property not specifically involved in a conflict. A hand grenade is used in a crowded restaurant, killing and maiming more than its user's target. "F-T-F": Internet-speak for a face-to-face meeting between people who, up until then, have never met in person. An underage girl sets up such a meeting with a person she believes to be a boy her age, but who is actually a grown man. "Mayday": Internationally recognized radio distress call. Horatio and Frank are returning an escaped prisoner back to Miami but discover mid-light that their plane has been hijacked. "Friendly Fire": Term for being fired upon by someone on your own side. An inventor is killed by one of his own creations. "Terminal Velocity": The maximum speed reached by a falling object. A skydiver dies after his parachute lines snap mid-air. |
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CSI: Miami | hasFeature |
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Game of Thrones: In-universe term for a power struggle between certain groups or/and individuals for a very powerful position. | |
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Game of Thrones | hasFeature |
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Shadowrun adventure Total Eclipse: An astronomical event that occurs when a celestial object is temporarily obscured, either by passing into the shadow of another body or by having another body pass between it and the viewer. | |
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Chill Factor: The felt air temperature on exposed skin due to wind. | |
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Eclipse Phase: The period between when a virus enters a cell, and when the cell is completely taken over by the virus. | |
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Eclipse Phase (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
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Singularity: A point at which a given mathematical object is not defined or not well-behaved, for example infinite or not differentiable. | |
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CSI: Several episode titles refer to things involved in specific cases or the series as a whole. "Fahrenheit 932": The temperature at which flashover, or the simultaneous eruption into flame of multiple objects, occurs. This happens in the home of a firefighter accused of murder by arson. "Chaos Theory": The study of random, unpredictable behavior or occurrences. A victim's death is determined to be the accidental result of a series of unfortunate events. Her parents, however, refuse to accept this conclusion. "Primum Non Nocere": Latin for first (or above all), do no harm. Commonly referred to as the Hippocratic Oath taken by doctors upon entering the medical profession. A doctor is suspected of murder. "Cross Jurisdictions": Term for an investigation spreading past one department's legal territory into another's. This episode is the Back Door Pilot for CSI: Miami, whose team gets involved when a kidnapper takes his victims from Las Vegas to Nevada. "All for Our Country": The Nevada state motto. The series is set in Las Vegas. "Mea Culpa": Latin for "through my fault" used as an admission of guilt. Someone eventually admits to a crime that a family member is being tried for. They'd kept quiet, trusting the system to not punish an innocent person. "Post Mortem": Latin for "after death," used to refer to autopsies. "Coup de Grace": French for "shot of mercy," often used to describe killing someone to end their suffering. A police officer fatally shoots a former partner, and it's up to the team to determine if it was intentional or not. "418/427": LVPD codes for missing person and kidnapping, respectively. The episode involves both. "The CSI Effect": After the original series began, this term was coined to describe the expectation of jurors that life would imitate television in that forensics evidence would be obtained very quickly and be presented at trial in such a way that a defendant's guilt or innocence would be obvious. |
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CSI | hasFeature |
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Dead Space: Air that is inhaled by the body in breathing, but does not take part in gas exchange. | |
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Dead Space (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Code 7 is not itself a terminology title, instead being named after something in the game. However, the titles of the episodes do follow this trope, since they're all terms used in computing: Allocation, Threading, Memory, Backdoor and Permutation. | |
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Code 7 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Terminology Title / int_eef6621b | comment |
Event Horizon: A boundary in spacetime beyond which events cannot affect an outside observer. | |
Terminology Title / int_eef6621b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Terminology Title / int_eef6621b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Event Horizon | hasFeature |
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Terminology Title / int_ef076a36 | type |
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Terminology Title / int_ef076a36 | comment |
Star Trek: Voyager episodes: "Persistence of Vision": The phenomenon by which an image is retained on the human retina for approximately 1/24th of a second after we see it (which makes movies possible). "Coda": The concluding passage of a piece of music, typically forming an addition to the basic structure. |
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Terminology Title / int_ef076a36 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Terminology Title / int_ef076a36 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Star Trek: Voyager | hasFeature |
Terminology Title / int_ef076a36 |
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