"Conceptual Frame"@en . "Frames as intended by Fillmore's frame semantics: the basic elements of semantic intepretation of natural language, independent from a specific lexicon (but not necessarily from a specific culture), necessarily evoked by any word, typically associated with a real world occurrence (situation) when evoked. When considered as multigrade predicates (n-ary relations, with role places and value positions within places), frame elements are binary projections of a multigrade predicate, where the first argument of the projection is always the (reified) event or situation occurring wrt to the evoked frame."@en . "Frames as intended by Fillmore's frame semantics: the basic elements of semantic intepretation of natural language, independent from a specific lexicon (but not necessarily from a specific culture), necessarily evoked by any word, typically associated with a real world occurrence (situation) when evoked.\nWhen considered as multigrade predicates (n-ary relations, with role places and value positions within places), frame elements are binary projections of a multigrade predicate, where the first argument of the projection is always the (reified) event or situation occurring wrt to the evoked frame." . . . . .