Sorry, should have checked your profile first, doesn't look like you are a student trying to scam free homework help. By the time I had finished editing this though, it had timed out.
SVC is Sensorless Vector Control. V/F is simple Volts-per-Hertz control. No idea what you mean by the rest to be honest, but the French tend to want to describe things on their own terms a lot, rather than stick to industry common terminology. So who knows.
With a VFD, at the very least the voltage and frequency must change together at an appropriate ratio to maintain torque in the motor at "any" speed command. But in that basic form, referred to as Volt-per-Hertz V/H or V/F for Frequency) or also "Scalar" mode, the VFD puts it out, but the motor may or may not respond properly or optimally based on the load and the response of the load to the change. So especially at lower speeds, the VFD may be telling the motor to spin at 25% speed, but the LOAD on the motor is only allowing it to spin at 20% speed. The motor would normally respond by increasing current, but the VFD may end up not allowing that to happen, so you end up with am "error" between the commanded speed and the actual speed.
Like in other feedback loop systems, you can read the error, and correct the response to reduce or eliminate it. A "Vector" drive does just that, it looks at the commanded speed, uses a feedback loop to determine the ACTUAL speed, then tweaks the output switching pattern of the VFD PWM signal to correct that error. In a Closed Loop Vector drive, that feedback is going to come from a shaft encoder on the motor, that reports back the actual motor rotor position to a high speed processor in the drive. An SVC version, dubbed as "Sensorless" is actually a misnomer, because the sensors are still there, they are just not external to the drive, such as the encoder. In an SVC drive, the electronics look at very small changes in current caused by the motor magnetics as the rotor passed through the magnetic fields of the stator. It holds a mathematical "model" of the motor's normal profile and compares these tiny changes to that model to derive the real rotor speed. So from that, it then makes those tweaks to the output to correct the speed (or torque) error that it sees.
Bottom line, a drive using SVC can be an order of magnitude more accurate in speed control, but perhaps more importantly, it can provide the correct amount of torque to maintain accurate speed control with widely varying changes in the load, and right down to NEARLY stopped rotors. The general rule is that V/F mode can allow relatively accurate speed control down to a 4:1 speed range, where SVC can maintain it down to 100:1, sometimes as much as 1000:1 on the better ones. So if you need to run a motor at 1Hz, you need SVC. If you are never going to run it below 50% speed, maybe not. SVC is great for things like machine tools and conveyors, but is relatively pointless on things like pumps and fans.