Eknjige //free\\ -

A PhD student studying climate policy maintains an eknjige of 2,000 atomic notes. Each paper is not a single note but 20–30 claims, data points, and methods, all linked by “supports,” “questions,” or “methodologically similar to.” Writing the literature review becomes a query: “Find all notes that question the effectiveness of carbon pricing, then link to notes on alternative mechanisms.”

I should start by clarifying that does not appear to be a standard word in English, German, Dutch, or the Scandinavian languages. It is not found in major dictionaries, and a search suggests it may be a typographical error, a neologism, a brand name, a username, or a misspelling of another term. eknjige