<lang>

<lang> (language name) name of a language mentioned in etymological or other linguistic discussion. 9.3.4 Etymological Information
Module dictionaries — 9 Dictionaries
In addition to global attributes att.lexicographic (@expand, @norm, @split, @value, @orig, @location, @mergedIn, @opt)
Used by
May contain
Declaration

<rng:element name="lang">
 <rng:ref name="att.global.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.lexicographic.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="macro.paraContent"/>
</rng:element>
element lang
{
   att.global.attributes,
   att.lexicographic.attributes,
   macro.paraContent
}
Example
<entry>
 <form>
  <orth>publish</orth> ... </form>
 <etym>
  <lang>ME.</lang>
  <mentioned>publisshen</mentioned>,
 <lang>F.</lang>
  <mentioned>publier</mentioned>, <lang>L.</lang>
  <mentioned>publicare,
     publicatum</mentioned>. <xr>See <ref>public</ref>; cf. <ref>2d -ish</ref>.</xr>
 </etym>
</entry>
Note
May contain character data mixed with phrase-level elements.