0 a note in a book that tells you to look somewhere else in the book for more information about something --
1 (in books) an instruction to look somewhere else in the same book for related information --
The natural relationships in documents are either (i) substructures, or (ii) references to other parts of the document (where the term reference here means simply a cross-reference in a document).
Terms listed in this glossary are printed in bold in the main text, allowing easy cross-reference.
Particularly with such an interdisciplinary subject the ability of the reader to easily cross-reference between papers has been lost as a result of this omission.
Occasionally, a chance to make a cross-reference to another paper in the volume was missed, but otherwise the book is very well edited.
All these cases of textual cross-reference and patterns of combination are matched in the music.
The quality, extent of coverage, the method of presentation, and cross-reference to other chapters in the book by most authors are very good.
Several major opportunities to cross-reference information were squandered during the production of this encyclopaedia and that means its value as a research tool is limited.
The immediate dramatic impact being clear, what requires justification is the critical need to consider it a cross-reference at all.