<oVar>

<oVar> (orthographic-variant reference) in a dictionary example, indicates a reference to variant orthographic form(s) of the headword. 9 Dictionaries
Moduledictionaries — 9 Dictionaries
Attributes att.ptrLike.form (@target) att.lexicographic (@expand, @norm, @split, @value, @orig, @location, @mergedIn, @opt)
typeindicates the kind of variant involved.
Status Optional
Datatype

<rng:ref name="data.enumerated"/>
data.enumerated
Sample values include:
pt
(past tense)
pp
(past participle)
prp
(present participle)
f
(feminine)
pl
(plural)
Used by model.ptrLike.form
May contain
dictionaries: oRef
gaiji: g
Declaration

<rng:element name="oVar">
<rng:ref name="att.global.attributes"/>
<rng:ref name="att.ptrLike.form.attributes"/>
<rng:ref name="att.lexicographic.attributes"/>
<rng:optional>
 <rng:attribute name="type">
  <rng:ref name="data.enumerated"/>
 </rng:attribute>
</rng:optional>
<rng:zeroOrMore>
 <rng:choice>
  <rng:text/>
  <rng:ref name="model.gLike"/>
  <rng:ref name="oRef"/>
 </rng:choice>
</rng:zeroOrMore>
</rng:element>
element oVar
{
   att.global.attributes,
   att.ptrLike.form.attributes,
   att.lexicographic.attributes,
   attribute type { data.enumerated }?,
   ( text | model.gLike | oRef )*
}
Example
<entry>
 <form>
  <orth>take</orth>
 </form>
 <cit type="example">
  <quote>Mr Burton <oVar type="pt">took</oVar> us for French</quote>
 </cit>
</entry>
Note
Character data or oRef.