For more fine-grained description of participant
activities during a spoken text, the
If included, the name of the organization should be tagged
using the
This class is used in the
Dates and places, if included in the content of this element,
should be tagged using the general
This element class does not contain all those elements which
can appear between chunks: the class
This class defines the set of chunk- and inter-level elements
available in all bases; it is used in defining the standard models
The function of this element seems to overlap with both the ORG attribute on DIVs and the samplingDecl in the encodingDesc.
yyyy-mm-dd, as defined by ISO 8601: 1988,
For simple dates, the value should give the Gregorian date
in the form (yyyy-mm-dd) specified by ISO 8601. More complicated dates
or special applications may require another calendar or another form;
these should be documented in the
The rules governing the association of declarable elements
with individual parts of a TEI text are fully defined in chapter
The rules governing the association of declarable elements
with individual parts of a TEI text are fully defined in chapter
For derivative texts, details of the ancestor may be included in the source description.
The list presented here is primarily for illustrative purposes.
For many literary texts, a simple binary opposition between
fiction
and fact
is naïve in the extreme; this parameter is not intended
for purposes of subtle literary analysis, but as a simple means of
characterising the claimed fictiveness of a given text. No claim is made
that works characterised as fact
are in any sense true
.
This element class contains a subset of those elements which
can appear in the unstructured
The value may be a unique identifier from a database, or
simply a more explicit name for the referent. Its purpose is only to
record an identification; if the analysis leading to the identification
is to be recorded as well, the analytic tags described in chapter
In providing a
The content of this element may be used as an alternative to the more formal specification made possible by its attributes; it may also be used to supplement the formal specification with commentary or clarification.
Female informant, well-educated, born in Shropshire UK, 12 Jan 1950, of unknown occupation. Speaks French fluently. Socio-Economic status B2.
Female informant, well-educated, born in Shropshire UK, 12 Jan 1950, of unknown occupation. Speaks French fluently. Socio-Economic status B2. ]]>
The global
This element may be used either for proper nouns only (in
which case it is synonymous with
This class of elements can occur only within larger
elements of the class
This element may be used either for proper nouns only (in
which case it is synonymous with
Difficulty in forming a consensus here means that I have allowed only a single attribute: possibly a degree attribute should be added (LB)
activeparticipants in a non-mutual relationship, or all the participants in a mutual one.
passiveparticipants in a non-mutual relationship.
Texts recorded in the Canadian Parliament building in Ottawa, between April and November 1988 ]]>
If the
The content of this element may be used as an alternative to the more formal specification made possible by its attributes; it may also be used to supplement the formal specification with commentary or clarification.
This element is mandatory when applicable.
Published as part of TEI P2.
No source: this is an original work.
This is about the shortest TEI document imaginable.
This element is required.
hhmm, using the 24 hour clock.
If the normalized form of time is not given using the twenty-four
hour clock, this fact should be documented in the
The part of speech analysis applied throughout section 4 was added by hand and has not been checked ]]>
Errors in transcription controlled by using the WordPerfect spelling checker, with a user defined dictionary of 500 extra words taken from Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary. ]]>
May be used to note the results of proof reading the
text against its original, indicating (for example) whether
discrepancies have been silently rectified, or recorded using the
editorial tags described in section
All words converted to Modern American spelling using
Websters 9th Collegiate dictionary
All opening quotation marks converted to &odq; all closing
quotation marks converted to &cdq;.
]]>
"Hi-8" 8 mm NTSC camcorder with integral directional microphone and windshield and stereo digital sound recording channel. ]]>
8-track analogue transfer mixed down to 19 cm/sec audio tape for cassette mastering ]]>
End-of-line hyphenation silently removed where appropriate ]]>
Converted to modern American spelling
Texts collected for use in the Claremont Shakespeare Clinic, June 1990 ]]>
No quote marks have been retained. Instead, the rendition
attribute on the Q element is used to specify what kinds of
quote mark was used, according to the following list:
]]>
All quotation marks are retained in the text and are represented by standard entity references ]]>
No source: created in machine-readable form.
]]>Dates are represented in ISO order: YYYYMMDD.
All integer numbers are left-filled to 8 digits. ]]>
electronic title pageprefixed to every TEI-conformant text.
Originally prepared for use in the production of a series of
old-spelling concordances in 1968, this text was extensively
checked and revised for use during the editing of the new Oxford
Shakespeare (Wells and Taylor, 1989).
Turned letters are silently corrected.
Original spelling and typography is retained, except that long s
and ligatured forms are not encoded.
One of the few elements unconditionally required in any TEI document; the header may also be exchanged as an independent document.