English | French |
parent account | compte parent (An account that is above other accounts in the hierarchy to which any action taken on the main account entity can propagate to) |
parent business | division mère (A business in which any action taken on the main business can propagate to the subordinate business) |
parent business unit | division mère (A business unit that is immediately above another business unit in the business hierarchy of an organization) |
parent cache server | serveur de cache parent (In a multi-tiered cache hierarchy, a disk-based cache proxy/server that sits between the edge cache node and the origin server) |
parent category | catégorie parente (An entity used in catalogs to group a set of products in a hierarchy. For example Music is a parent category and Rock Jazz and Classical are child categories) |
Parent: Child Business Units | Divis. mère : sous-divisions (A security access level that allows a user access to record types in the user's business unit and all business units subordinate to the user's business unit) |
parent company | société mère (A company that owns more than one separate subsidiary) |
parent content type template | modèle de type de contenu parent (A type of content that exists prior to the association with an actual Windows SharePoint Services list. This distinction is made since items cannot use a type until it is associated with a WSS list) |
parent customer | client parent (An account that is immediately above a contact entity. Any action taken on the account entity can propagate to the child contact entity) |
parent element | élément parent (In a tree structure, an element that contains subordinate elements called child elements) |
parent host group | groupe hôte parent (" A host group that contains another host group, which is known as a "child host group.") |
parent keyword | mot clé parent (A keyword that is associated with one or more subordinate keywords) |
parent language | langue parente (The language of the full language pack that a Language Interface Pack (LIP) can be installed onto) |
parent node | nœud parent (A node with subordinate node(s), called children) |
parent object | objet parent (The object in which another object resides. A parent object implies relation. For example, a folder is a parent object in which a file, or child object, resides. An object can be both a parent and a child object. For example, a subfolder that contains files is both the child of the parent folder and the parent folder of the files) |
parent partition | partition parente (The partition that manages the virtual machines) |
parent picklist | liste déroulante parente (A drop-down list control that determines the values of another drop-down list (also known as a picklist) or a check box) |
parent project | projet parent (A project that has one or more subprojects) |
parent record | enregistrement parent (The highest-level container of one or more work items that includes new and changed configuration items) |
parent site | site parent (A site that has one or more child sites) |
parent solution | solution parente (A solution to which a component belongs to. A component can have only one parent solution) |
parent table | table parent (A table that assumes a parent role when it participates in an integrity relationship with another table and whose attribute values migrate to foreign key attributes in the table assuming the child role in the relationship) |
parent Web | site Web parent (In a hierarchical structure, the Web site that contains the active site) |
parent Web site | site Web parent (In a hierarchical structure, the Web site that contains the active site) |
parent window | fenêtre parente (A primary window that provides window management for a set of child windows. See also child window and multiple-document interface) |
parent workflow | workflow parent (A workflow that starts a child workflow. The child workflow communicates its outcome back to the parent workflow) |
primary parent category | catégorie parente primaire (The parent category of a product or category that is used to determine the canonical path to that product or category, or to apply category level pricing rules to the category or product) |