A cellar is a storage room built below ground level (usually under a house), primarily for the storage of food and drink (especially wine) for use throughout the year. A cellar is intended to remain at a constant cool (not freezing) temperature all year round. Cellars are more common in older houses than in modern houses, and were important shelters from air raids during World War II.
Cellars are popular in most western countries except for Britain. In Britain people tend to store food and drink in a garage if at all. However the majority of large European and North American residencies have cellars.
The term cellar is also used to refer to a personal collection of wine, no matter where it is stored.
CELLAR's approach to multilingualism is then described in terms of six facets of multilingual computing (section 3).
In a CELLAR knowledge base, every object is owned by exactly one object of which it is a part, but it may be referred to by an arbitrary number of other objects to which it is related.
CELLAR uses a simple built-in algorithm that considers position relative to white space and the ends of the string to determine the function of each occurrence of an ambiguous code point.