Exemple: <am> (marqueur d'abréviation)
These search results reproduce every example of the use of <am> 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 <am> 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.
10 Manuscript Description
10.6.1 The <msItem> and <msItemStruct> Elements
<msItem defective="true">
<locus from="1r" to="9v">1r-9v</locus>
<title>Knýtlinga saga</title>
<msItem n="1.1">
<locus from="1r:1" to="2v:30">1r:1-2v:30</locus>
<incipit defective="true">dan<ex>n</ex>a a
engl<ex>an</ex>di</incipit>
<explicit defective="true">en meðan <expan>haraldr</expan>
hein hafði k<ex>onung</ex>r v<am>
<g
ref="http://www.examples.com/abbrevs.xml#er"/>
</am>it
yf<ex>ir</ex> danmork</explicit>
</msItem>
<!-- msItems 1.2 to 1.4 -->
</msItem>
</msContents>
11 Representation of Primary Sources
11.3.2 Abbreviation and Expansion
<g ref="#b-er"/>
</am>y</abbr>
<abbr>
<am>
<g ref="#b-per"/>
</am>sone
</abbr> ...
11.3.2 Abbreviation and Expansion
<am>
<g ref="#b-er"/>
</am>
<ex>er</ex>
</choice>y
<choice>
<am>
<g ref="#b-per"/>
</am>
<ex>per</ex>
</choice>sone ...
<abbr>Mr<am>.</am>
</abbr> Jones?
12 Critical Apparatus
12.3 Using Apparatus Elements in Transcriptions
<app>
<rdg resp="#ES">perfectio<am>
<g ref="#ii"/>
</am>
</rdg>
<rdg resp="#FJF">perfectio<ex>u</ex>n</rdg>
<rdg resp="#PGR">perfectiou<ex>n</ex>
</rdg>
</app>
12.3 Using Apparatus Elements in Transcriptions
<app>
<rdg resp="#ES">perfecti<am>
<g ref="#ii"/>
</am>
</rdg>
<rdg xml:id="f105" resp="#FJF">perfectio<ex>u</ex>n</rdg>
<rdg xml:id="r105" resp="#PGR">perfectiou<ex>n</ex>
</rdg>
</app>
<!-- ... <note> appearing elsewhere in the document ... -->
<note target="#r105 #f105">Furnivall's expansion implies that the bar
is an abbreviation for 'u'. There are no certain instances of
this mark as an abbreviation for 'u' in these manuscripts and it is
widely used as an abbreviation for 'n'. Ruggiers' expansion is to
be accepted.</note>