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The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a language for representing information about resources in the World Wide Web.
Originally RDF was primarily intended to represent metadata about Web resources, such as the title, author, and modification date of a Web page, copyright and licensing information about a Web document, or the availability schedule for some shared resource. However, by generalizing the concept of a "Web resource", RDF can also be used to represent information about things that can be identified on the Web, i.e. the semantic web.
Since XML/RDF code is some verbose, writing it manually is fairly time consuming. The W3C team proposes a "textual syntax for RDF called Turtle that allows RDF graphs to be completely written in a compact and natural text form, with abbreviations for common usage patterns and datatypes" (Turtle - Terse RDF Triple Language, retrieved 15:31, 10 March 2008 (MET)).
Dean M., Schreiber G (Editors); van Harmelen F., Hendler J., Horrocks I., McGuinness D.L., Patel-Schneider P.F., Stein L.A. (Authors), OWL Web Ontology Language Reference, W3C Recommendation, 10 February 2004. HTML