pattern, n
            
1. 'The original proposed to imitation; the archetype; that
            which is to be copied; an exemplar' (J.); an example or model
            deserving imitation; an example or model of a particular excellence.
            
2. Anything fashioned, shaped, or designed to serve as a model
            from which something is to be made; a model, design, plan, or
            outline.
                -- Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edn
        
 
	
                The elements of this language are elements called patterns.
            Each pattern describes a problem which occurs over and over again in
            our environment, and then describes the core of the solution to that
            problem, in such a way that you can use this solution a million
            times over, without ever doing it the same way twice.
                Alexander
              et al. A Pattern Languge, p x. 1977
        
 
	
                A pattern is a particular arrangement of elements that
            constitute a model to be used or emulated. Patterns are patterns if
            they can do something, if they can cause something to occur with
            some regularity. ... a pattern [is] an arrangement that expresses a
            reproducible and meaningful relationship between relatively
            independent components.
                Cohen.
              Tending Adam's Garden, §131. 2000