Beispiel: <add> (addition)

These search results reproduce every example of the use of <add> in the Guidelines, including all localised and translated versions. In some cases, the examples have been drawn from discussion of other elements in the Guidelines and illustrating the use of <add> is not the main focus of the passage in question. In other cases, examples may be direct translations of each other, and hence identical from the perspective of their encoding.

1 The TEI Infrastructure


att.placement

<add place="margin">[An addition written in the margin]</add>
<add place="bottom opposite">[An addition written at the
foot of the current page and also on the facing page]</add>

3 Elements Available in All TEI Documents


3.4.3 Additions, Deletions, and Omissions

The story I am going to relate is true as to its main facts,
and as to the consequences <add place="above">of
these facts</add> from which this tale takes its title.

3.4.3 Additions, Deletions, and Omissions

<l>
 <del rend="overstrike">Inviolable</del>
 <add place="below">Inexplicable</add>
splendour of Corinthian white and gold
</l>

<add>

The story I am going to relate is true as to
its main facts, and as to the consequences <add place="above">of
these facts</add> from which this tale takes its title.

3.12.2 Core Tags for Drama

<stage>Enter two Centinels.
<add place="margin">Now call'd <name xml:id="barnardo">Bernardo</name> &amp;
 <name xml:id="francisco">Francesco</name>.</add>
</stage>
<sp who="#francisco">
 <speaker>1.</speaker>
 <l part="Y">Stand: who is that?</l>
</sp>
<sp who="#barnardo">
 <speaker>2.</speaker>
 <l part="Y">Tis I.</l>
</sp>
<sp who="#francisco">
 <speaker>1.</speaker>
 <l>O you come most carefully vpon your watch,</l>
</sp>
<sp who="#barnardo">
 <speaker>2.</speaker>
 <l>And if you meete Marcellus and Horatio,</l>
 <l>The partners of my watch, bid them make haste.</l>
</sp>
<sp who="#francisco">
 <speaker>1.</speaker>
 <l part="Y">I will: See who goes there.</l>
</sp>
<stage>Enter Horatio and Marcellus.</stage>

11 Representation of Primary Sources


11.3.4 Additions and Deletions

Some things are best at first
sight. Others — and here is one of them — <add hand="#mb">do
ever</add> improve by recognition ....

<handNote xml:id="mb">Max Beerbohm holograph</handNote>

11.3.4 Additions and Deletions

The O.E.D. is not a dictionary so much as a corpus of
precedents <del hand="#RG">in the</del>: current,
obsolete, <add hand="#RG" place="above">cant,</add>
cataphretic and nonce-words are all included.

11.3.4 Additions and Deletions

As for 'significant artist.' You quote the O.E.D <add hand="#RG" place="above">
 <del>for an abridgement</del>
</add>in
explanation...

11.3.4 Additions and Deletions

You quote the <add hand="#RG" place="margin">
 <del>Norton</del>
</add>
O.E.D...

11.3.4 Additions and Deletions

...
are all included. <del hand="#RG">It is</del>
<subst>
 <add>T</add>
 <del>t</del>
</subst>he expressed

11.3.4 Additions and Deletions

<l>
 <delSpan rend="verticalStrike" spanTo="#delend01"/>
Tis moonlight <del>upon</del>
 <add>over</add> Oman's sky
</l>
<l>Her isles of pearl look lovelily<anchor xml:id="delend01"/>
</l>

11.3.5 Substitutions

<l>
 <delSpan rend="verticalStrike" spanTo="#delend02"/>
Tis moonlight <subst>
  <del>upon</del>
  <add>over</add>
 </subst> Oman's sky
</l>
<l>Her isles of pearl look lovelily<anchor xml:id="delend02"/>
</l>

11.3.5 Substitutions

One must have lived longer
with <subst>
 <del seq="1">this</del>
 <del seq="2">
  <add seq="1">such
     a</add>
 </del>
 <add seq="2">a</add>
</subst> system, to appreciate its
advantages.

11.3.5 Substitutions

<l>And towards our distant rest began to trudge,</l>
<l>
 <subst>
  <del>Helping the worst amongst us</del>
  <add>Dragging the
     worst amongt us</add>
 </subst>, who'd no boots
</l>
<l>But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame;
<subst>
  <del status="shortEnd">half-</del>
  <add>all</add>
 </subst> blind;</l>
<l>Drunk with fatigue ; deaf even to the hoots</l>
<l>Of tired, outstripped <del>fif</del> five-nines that dropped behind.</l>

11.3.5 Substitutions

One must have lived longer with
<app>
 <rdg varSeq="1">
  <del>this</del>
 </rdg>
 <rdg varSeq="2">
  <del>
   <add>such a</add>
  </del>
 </rdg>
 <rdg varSeq="3">
  <add>a</add>
 </rdg>
</app>
system, to appreciate its advantages.

11.4.2 Hand, Responsibility, and Certainty Attributes

<add place="above" resp="#FB" hand="#WJ">But</add>
<choice>
 <sic>One</sic>
 <corr resp="#FB">one</corr>
</choice> must have
lived ...

<!-- elsewhere -->
<respStmt xml:id="FB">
 <resp>editorial changes</resp>
 <name>Fredson Bowers</name>
</respStmt>
<respStmt xml:id="WJ">
 <resp>authorial changes</resp>
 <name>William James</name>
</respStmt>

11.5.2 Use of the <gap>, <del>, <damage>, <unclear>, and <supplied> Elements in Combination

This is the text
<add xml:id="ADD1">with some added
<add xml:id="ADD2">(interlinear!)</add>
material</add>
as written.

11.5.2 Use of the <gap>, <del>, <damage>, <unclear>, and <supplied> Elements in Combination

<del>This sentence was deleted
<add>originally</add> from the text.</del>

11.5.2 Use of the <gap>, <del>, <damage>, <unclear>, and <supplied> Elements in Combination

<add>This sentence was added
<del>eventually</del> to the text.</add>

<subst>

... are all included. <del hand="#RG">It is</del>
<subst>
 <add>T</add>
 <del>t</del>
</subst>he expressed