Publication issued in successive parts bearing numerical or chronological designations and intended to be continued indefinitely.
Items with the same title that may or may not be published on a regular schedule. Periodicals are also serials, but not all serials are periodicals.
Publications that appear more or less regularly--daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annually, for example.
Any library item that appears as part of a series (including series that are produced without a regular schedule).
publications issued at regular intervals--daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, annually, or biannually-- and are generally intended to be continued indefinitely. Serials include Periodicals as well as annual publications, proceedings, and transactions. These are located on the first floor of the library.
(a) Publications issued at intervals; serials usually have the same title over time. Periodicals are types of serials. (b) The department of the Library that processes periodicals.
Publications that appear regularly. In addition to periodicals, this term is often used to describe book series.
any publication issued in successive parts, usually (though not always) at regular intervals, and intended to be continued indefinitely. Serials include: periodicals, newspapers, magazines, annuals, yearbooks, journals, memoirs, proceedings, transactions, and numbered monographic series.
Publications issued in successive parts; usually (though not always) at regular intervals, and intended to be continued indefinitely; examples include newspapers, magazines , journals. periodicals, annuals, yearbooks, memoirs, proceedings, transactions, and numbered monographic series.
Publications which appear on a continuing basis. Other names for serials are periodicals, annuals, or continuations.
Also known as periodicals. A term that describes a wide range of publications that are issued in successive parts with no predictable end in sight. Periodicals, magazines, journals, newspapers, annual reports, series, some conference proceedings, and annual reviews are all examples of serials.
publications issued at regular intervals—daily, weekly, monthly, annually, etc. Serials may include periodicals as well as annual publications.
the publication of a literary work in successive installments as in a journal, magazine or newspaper. See also Periodical.
Serials is a term that represents the large category of periodicals, scholarly journals, and magazines.
a publication that is issued in parts, indefinitely over time. Serials include journals, periodicals, magazines, almanacs, annual reports, numbered monographs, and other materials. This term is sometimes used interchangeably with "periodical."