This schema for the TextGrid baseline encoding is freely available and you are hereby authorised to copy, modify, and redistribute it in any way without further reference or permissions. However, you must release the modified version under a different name than "TextGrid baseline encoding"
Written from scratch.
For the documentation of the ODD scheme
cf.
Version 1: baseline schema encoded in ODD was released in May 2008
Version 2: based on comments and decisions of WG Textencoding (meetings 18ff) a revised version is prepared
Version 3 (alpha): consolidates the comments received after the Mannheim meeting of TextGrid
Version 3.1: corrects a problem with lb, pb, pb
Version 3.11: issue with choice element in choice element resolved
Version 3.12: Model of sense corrected
sense no longer added to class model.noteLike
xr no longer added to class model.global
expression of content model of form simplified (<rng:group> <rng:ref name="gramGrp"/> <rng:ref name="form"/></rng:group> removed (does not effectively change the permitted content model)
gramGrp no longer added to class model.formPart
figure moved from pLike to divPart
rnc regenerated with Roma version 2010-07-01
Version 3.13: edition-Element allowed again (removes ambiguity in monogr's contentent model)
The baseline encoding schema saw the light of the day in
the TextGrid project. It primary
The encoding has since seen uses beyond its original use case.
The first formal draft for the baseline encoded as an ODD file was released in May 2008. A revised version was published in November 2008 and has since gone through a number of minor revisions. Consult the svn for a full tracking of changes.
First published as part of TEI P2.
No source: this is an original work.
This is about the shortest TEI document imaginable.
Available for academic research purposes only.
In the public domain
Available under licence from the publishers.
Contemporary blind stamped leather over wooden boards with evidence of a fore edge clasp closing to the back cover.
Quarter bound by the Phillipps' binder, Bretherton, with his sticker on the front pastedown.
Rebound by an unknown 19th c. company; edges cropped and gilt.
ctlig
like
the following: per
like the following: The manuscript is written in two contemporary hands, otherwise unknown, but clearly those of practised scribes. Hand I writes ff. 1r-22v and hand II ff. 23 and 24. Some scholars, notably Verner Dahlerup and Hreinn Benediktsson, have argued for a third hand on f. 24, but the evidence for this is insubstantial.
#sym
.
British English and French
2 columns of 42 lines ruled in ink, with central rule between the columns.
Some pages have 2 columns, with central rule between the columns; each column with between 40 and 50 lines of writing.
These decrees, most blessed Pope Hadrian, we propounded in the public council ... and they
confirmed them in our hand in your stead with the sign of the Holy Cross, and afterwards
inscribed with a careful pen on the paper of this page, affixing thus the sign of the Holy
Cross.
First performance
A collection of Lollard sermons
Where both upper- and lower-case i, j, u, v, and vv have been normalized, to modern
20th century typographical practice, the
Spacing between words and following punctuation has been regularized to zero spaces; spacing between words has been regularized to one space.
Spelling converted throughout to Modern American usage, based on Websters 9th Collegiate dictionary.
Early modern
Female respondent, well-educated, born in Shropshire UK, 12 Jan 1950, of unknown occupation. Speaks French fluently. Socio-Economic status B2.
Tübingen— to enter the letter
uwith an umlaut hold down the
optionkey and press
0 0 f c
My dearsaidMr. Bennet ,
have you heard thatNetherfield Park is let at last?
The seal of S IOHANNES OLAVI
.
Parchment tag on which is written: Woldorp Iohanne G
.
La valeur n'attend pas le nombre des années
Now to business.
To business.
I beg your pardon?
I'm sorry, I thought you were proposing a toast.
Freely available on a non-commercial basis.
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.
A reference is created by assembling the following, in the reverse order as that
listed here: