GLOSSARY | DEFINITIONS

Plain-language glossary

Short definitions kept practical. For a deeper framework, read the due-diligence guide.

Token symbol
The short ticker used to label a token, such as BVC for Crypto Chip Token. The symbol is a label only and does not by itself prove uniqueness on a network.
Smart contract
Code deployed to a blockchain that defines how a token behaves: who can hold it, transfer it, mint it, or burn it. The contract is the actual source of truth for token behaviour.
BNB Smart Chain
An EVM-compatible chain operated by the BNB ecosystem. Many small tokens, including the BVC reference, are deployed on this chain. Transfers are recorded on its public ledger.
Circulating supply
The portion of total supply considered to be in the hands of the public, excluding locked, reserved, or burned tokens. Reported figures often need to be checked against the contract.
Max supply
The maximum number of tokens that will ever exist according to the contract or whitepaper. A contract with mint functions can change this picture.
Liquidity
The depth of buy and sell orders close to the current price. Higher liquidity means trades fill closer to the quoted price.
Volume
The amount of a token traded over a period. Reported volume should always be checked against multiple sources for thinly traded tokens.
Market pair
The two assets quoted against each other on an exchange, such as BVC against a stablecoin. The pair determines what the price actually means.
Holder distribution
The breakdown of who holds the token, often shown as the largest wallets. Concentration can change how much circulating supply is meaningful.
Whitepaper
A document published by a project to describe the token, its purpose, and its planned mechanics. A claim file rather than a guarantee of execution.
Token utility
What the token actually does inside its system. Utility claims should be checkable against the contract, not just described in marketing.
Inactive market
A market with little or no current trading. Profile pages may persist long after meaningful trading has stopped.
Due diligence
The set of checks a careful reader runs before treating a project's claims as evidence. Covered in detail on the token due-diligence page.

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