A dump of the current situation
minidump summary (125 items):
A minidump is a file containing information about the state of a process, generally used for post-mortem debugging on Windows.
crash-dumps summary (440 items):
A core dump or crash dump consists of the recorded state of the working memory of a computer program at a specific time, generally when the program has terminated abnormally
coredump summary (462 items):
A core dump represents the state of working memory of a Unix program at a specific time, often when the program has terminated abruptly.
dump summary (879 items):
Recording the contents of memory after application or operating system failure, or by operator request, in a core dump for use in subsequent problem analysis. Also, recording a file or medium as a backup.
memory-dump summary (77 items):
A memory dump is the recorded state of the working memory of a computer program at a specific time.
dumpfile summary (23 items):
no description
My personal opinion
In general I see questions about dumps on topic. It's related to debugging, which is sometimes a necessity to programming.
With some debugging background on Windows, I'd say many of the above are duplicates and should be merged / burninated.
I'm fine distinguishing between dumps on Windows and dumps on Linux, since we are potentially not experts in both at the same time. I do not like e.g. a combination of dump+windows and dump+linux, since it will be hard to follow favorite questions.
On the other hand I'm fine not to distinguish specifically between kernel dumps and user mode dumps, since at this level, a user mode dump calls API methods which are closely related to the kernel. Also, the tools to analyze kernel dumps and user mode dumps are the same (at least on Windows). Therefore e.g. windows-dump+kernel and linux-dump+kernel are nice.
I'd of course not touch the programming language specific dumps (not mentioned above) e.g. thread-dump, heap-dump for Java (maybe those can be combined, but I'm not an expert here) and SQL-related dumps (pg-dump, mysqldump) etc.
Proposal
I'd leave coredump, since that's IMHO the most widely used term for Linux.
I'd leave crash-dumps, since that's a good term for Windows, even in case of a deadlock.
I don't like the term minidump, since it is user mode specific. A Windows kernel dump is called full dump, not minidump. Since I don't want to distinguish between user mode and kernel dumps, this one should be burninated. Since it seems to be Windows related (from the tag wiki), it should mainly be replaced by crash-dumps.
memory-dump is probably easy to assign to coredump or crash-dumps.
dump and dumpfile are too general ("recording a file or medium as backup", OMG), so that needs to be decided case-by-case.
In any case, the tag wiki needs editing for clarification, potentially "DO NOT USE" for dump and dumpfile.
Discussion
Maybe I didn't get the Linux part right. Is a user mode dump also called coredump? (core sounds much like kernel stuff)
Happy voting.