subfile

subfile

(ˈsʌbˌfaɪl)
n
a file within another file
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The suggested articles stipulated that witnesses can assume his workplace or a police station as his residence if he wants to be safe, and can also allow the court or a lawyer to listen or hear the testimony of the witness without disclosing his data, and add his information in a subfile aside from the case document, but this only in cases where there are potential danger to his safety.
Similar to labeling folders in a traditional filing cabinet, each artifact needs to have a specific title, description, and purpose and needs to be uploaded to a specific file or subfile for easy access.
National Library of Medicine (NLM) TOXLINE users will notice that their searches no longer include records from the CRISP subfile. The CRISP subfile of toxicology-related research projects has been removed from the National Library of Medicine (NLM) TOXNET version of TOXLINE and replaced with RePORTERTOX.
To that end, I randomly split the data in two subfiles. The first subfile consisted of 1,026 cases, and the second one comprised 987 cases.
ZettaMirror runs on a prescheduled or on-demand basis and securely pushes changes, at the subfile level, from the local system up to the Zetta Storage Service.
(60.) An assortment can be found in subfile on pro-Spadina correspondence, file "Correspondence, July 1970-1971," box 1975-013/001, F0417, SSSOCCC, YUA.
A temporary relief hearing might not be needed, but you should have a subfile containing your preparations for it.
The answer to this questions is less obvious and more subfile as it looks at a first glance.
The accumulation subfile contains > 15,000 BCF and BAF values, gleaned from > 1,100 publications and encompassing approximately 700 distinct chemicals.
Subfile mark assignment was also conducted by the editors.