<del>
<del> (deletion) contains a letter, word, or passage deleted, marked as deleted, or otherwise indicated as superfluous or spurious in the copy text by an author, scribe, annotator, or corrector. 3.4.3 Additions, Deletions, and Omissions | |
Module | core — 3 Elements Available in All TEI Documents |
Attributes | att.transcriptional (@hand, @status, @seq) att.editLike (@cert, @resp, @evidence, @source, @precision) att.typed (@type, @subtype) |
Used by | model.pPart.transcriptional |
May contain | core: abbr add address bibl biblStruct binaryObject cb choice cit corr date del desc distinct email emph expan foreign gap gloss graphic hi index label lb list listBibl measure measureGrp mentioned milestone name note num orig pb ptr q quote ref reg rs said sic soCalled stage term time title unclear gaiji: g header: biblFull msdescription: catchwords depth dimensions height heraldry locus material msDesc origDate origPlace secFol signatures stamp watermark width namesdates: addName affiliation bloc country district forename genName geo geogFeat geogName listNym listOrg listPerson listPlace nameLink offset orgName persName placeName region roleName settlement state surname |
Declaration |
element del { att.global.attributes, att.transcriptional.attributes, att.editLike.attributes, att.typed.attributes, macro.paraContent } |
Example | <l> <del rend="overtyped">Mein</del> Frisch <del rend="overstrike" type="primary">schwebt</del> weht der Wind </l> |
Note | Degrees of uncertainty over what can
still be read may be indicated by use of the
certainty element (see 21 Certainty and Responsibility). This element should be used for deletion of shorter
sequences of text, typically single words or phrases.
The delSpan element should be used for longer
sequences of text, for those containing structural
subdivisions, and for those containing overlapping
additions and deletions. The text deleted must be at least partially legible, in order for
the encoder to be able to transcribe it. Illegible text within a
deletion may be marked using the
gap tag to signal that text is present but has not been
transcribed. Attributes on the gap element may be used to
indicate how much text is omitted, the reason for omitting it, etc. If text
is not fully legible, the unclear element (available when
using the additional tagset for transcription of primary sources)
should be used to signal the areas of text which cannot be read with
confidence in a similar way. See further sections 11.3.7 Text Omitted from or Supplied in the Transcription and, for the
close association of the del tag with the gap,
damage, unclear and supplied elements (the
latter three tags available when using the additional tagset for
transcription of primary sources), 11.5.2 Use of the <gap>, <del>, <damage>, <unclear>, and <supplied> Elements in Combination. |