Our team has conducted extensive research to compile a set of RDF-Resource Description Framework MCQs. We encourage you to test your RDF-Resource Description Framework knowledge by answering these 70 multiple-choice questions provided below.
Simply scroll down to begin!
A. Object, Object, Subject
B. Subject, Subject, Object.
C. Subject, Predicate, Object
D. Object, Predicate, Subject
A. True.
B. False.
C. No.
D. Yes.
A. This feature allows for increased lexical space.
B. This value allows for more syntactical leeway.
C. This feature allows for markup in literal values.
D. This feature allows for a more defined predicate.
A. fdfs
B. sdsf
C. dfds
D. rdfs
A. no
B. yes
A. yes
B. no
A. no
B. yes
A. yes
B. no
A. Web Ontology Language
B. None of the above
C. Web Oak Language
D. Web Onyx Language
A. yes
B. no
A. "Friend of A Fred"
B. None of the above
C. "Friend of a Friend"
D. "Friend of A Farmer"
A. Resource Description Framework
B. Records Description Format
C. Resource Document Format
D. None of the above
A. FDR literals.
B. RDF Liberals.
C. FRD Laterals.
D. RDF Literals
A. at the bottom with the $ sign
B. at the top with the $ sign
C. at the bottom with the @prefix directive
D. at the top with the @prefix directive
A. for determining the subject, predicate and object
B. for determining ONLY the predicate
C. for determining ONLY the object
D. for determining ONLY the subject
A. Any URI
B. Any resource
C. Resource indicated by blank node
D. None of the above
A. RDF/XML
B. None of the above
C. Notation 3 (or N3)
A. Daily.
B. Never.
C. Yearly.
D. Monthly.
A. network's name
B. name of the XML node
C. Notation 3
A. Tangent, and figment.
B. Primary source, and figment.
C. Secondary source, and tangent.
D. Primary source, and fragment.
A. subject-predicate-object
B. subject-predicate-subject
C. None of the above
D. object-predicate-object
A. connects a few documents with each other
B. introduces the notion of a class
C. Nothing
A. 1, 0
B. 0,1
C. True, false.
D. Yes, no
A. When they align with string theory.
B. When they equal each other.
C. When they are in accordance with Simple String Comparison.
A. Uniform Resource Identifier
B. Unicode Resource Identifier
C. Universal Race Identification
A. Its inherent
B. Its referent
C. Its itinerant
D. Its referee
A. Subject, Contact, Object
B. Subject, Predicate, Object
C. Subject, Object, Context
D. Subject, Preference, Context
A. A set of generalized RDF triples.
B. A set of distinct RDF doubles.
C. A set of context-dependent quadruples.
D. A group of context-free nodes.
A. color
B. has a white
C. None of the above
D. snow
A. node
B. URI, blank node or a Unicode string literal
C. URI
D. UTF-8 literal
A. IRAs literals, and bank notes.
B. IRIs, laterals, and blank nodes.
C. IRIs, literals, and black nodes.
D. IRIs, literals, and blank nodes
A. A point.
B. A predicate.
C. A node.
D. Parallels.
A. yes
B. no
A. The practice of pitting different content against one another.
B. The practice of making two different resources unavailable to eachother.
C. The practice of making multiple representations of different content available.
D. The practice of making multiple representations of the same content available.
A. PHP
B. SPARQL
C. None of the above
D. SQL
A. xsd:gDayMonth
B. xMonthxDay
C. MonthxDayx
D. xsd:gMonthDay
A. They are endpoints for a large network.
B. It means that they are together in clusters.
C. They are serving as starting points for interactions with a remote server.
D. It means that they are isolated from eachother.
A. HTML, or SMTP
B. HTTPS, or SMTP
C. PHP, or HTP
D. HTTP, or HTTPS
A. Logical space, valuable space, and logic-to-value mapping.
B. Lexical space, value space, and lexical-to-value mapping.
C. Lexical space, volume space, and lexical-to-volume mapping.
D. Laboratory space, valve space, and lexical-to-value mapping.
A. only in XML format
B. in a variety of formats
C. in XML or HTML format
A. It means that they share all common elements.
B. It means that they share a common element.
C. It means that they have different elements, however they correlate indirectly.
D. It means that they share no common element.
A. 64
B. 8
C. 16
D. 32
A. A generalized RDF graph.
B. A sub-lexical semantic statement.
C. A linear RDF predicate.
D. A specific RDF matrix.
A. for identification of content language
B. for identification a browser's language
C. None of the above
D. for identification a user's language
A. FDR graphs
B. RDF literals
C. RDF graphs
D. RDF libraries
A. Yes.
B. No, but they can be off by one character only.
C. No.
D. Yes, and they can be off by two characters.
A. It means that the source of the inherent is global.
B. It means that two different appearances of an IRI may denote the same resource.
C. It means that one appearance of an IRI denotes resources that are global in scale.
D. It means that global IRIs denote a single resource.
A. rdfstorage
B. triplestore
C. xmlstorage
D. None of the above
A. RFD Statement.
B. RDF Subject.
C. RDF Statement
D. RDF Suggestion.
A. A liberal.
B. A logical.
C. A lateral.
D. A literal.