Recipe for japanese chicken wings
Note: you are viewing the development version of Schema. See How we work for more details. The recipe for japanese chicken wings property can also be used to add more detail. The time it takes to actually cook the dish, in ISO 8601 duration format.
Nutrition information about the recipe or menu item. The category of the recipe—for example, appetizer, entree, etc. A single ingredient used in the recipe, e. Indicates a dietary restriction or guideline for which this recipe or menu item is suitable, e. The estimated cost of the supply or supplies consumed when performing instructions. The length of time it takes to prepare the items to be used in instructions or a direction, in ISO 8601 duration format.
A supply consumed when performing instructions or a direction. The quantity that results by performing instructions. For example, a paper airplane, 10 personalized candles. The subject matter of the content. The human sensory perceptual system or cognitive faculty through which a person may process or perceive information. Values should be drawn from the approved vocabulary. Indicates that the resource is compatible with the referenced accessibility API.
Identifies input methods that are sufficient to fully control the described resource. Content features of the resource, such as accessible media, alternatives and supported enhancements for accessibility. A characteristic of the described resource that is physiologically dangerous to some users. A human-readable summary of specific accessibility features or deficiencies, consistent with the other accessibility metadata but expressing subtleties such as “short descriptions are present but long descriptions will be needed for non-visual users” or “short descriptions are present and no long descriptions are needed.
Indicates a page documenting how licenses can be purchased or otherwise acquired, for the current item. The overall rating, based on a collection of reviews or ratings, of the item. In such cases, the referenced page may not directly publish the content. The item being described is intended to assess the competency or learning outcome defined by the referenced term. This property is a synonym for encoding.
The author of this content or rating. Please note that author is special in that HTML 5 provides a special mechanism for indicating authorship via the rel tag. That is equivalent to this and may be used interchangeably. An award won by or for this item. Fictional person connected with a creative work. A citation or reference to another creative work, such as another publication, web page, scholarly article, etc. This property is not suitable for use as a general Web access control mechanism.
It is expressed only in natural language. For example “Available by appointment from the Reading Room” or “Accessible only from logged-in accounts “. The location depicted or described in the content. For example, the location in a photograph or painting. Official rating of a piece of content—for example, ‘MPAA PG-13’.
Text of a notice appropriate for describing the copyright aspects of this Creative Work, ideally indicating the owner of the copyright for the Work. The country of origin of something, including products as well as creative works such as movie and TV content. In the case of TV and movie, this would be the country of the principle offices of the production company or individual responsible for the movie. In the case of products, the country of origin of the product. The exact interpretation of this may vary by context and product type, and cannot be fully enumerated here. The status of a creative work in terms of its stage in a lifecycle. Example terms include Incomplete, Draft, Published, Obsolete.
Some organizations define a set of terms for the stages of their publication lifecycle. For example, the motion picture known as “Ghostbusters” whose titleEIDR is “10. EIDR for a more edit-specific description. An alignment to an established educational framework. This property should not be used where the nature of the alignment can be described using a simple property, for example to express that a resource teaches or assesses a competency. The level in terms of progression through an educational or training context. Examples of educational levels include ‘beginner’, ‘intermediate’ or ‘advanced’, and formal sets of level indicators.