<group-type>
)Definitive list of key terms used for types of groups.
Master location: http://textalign.net/release/TAN-2021/vocabularies/group-types.TAN-voc.xml
Table 11.4. TAN keywords for types of groups
names | IRIs | Comments |
---|---|---|
div types |
| The group contains items that define groups of division types |
attr n attribute n tan lm |
| The group contains items that define groups relevant only in the context of
|
verb types |
| The group contains items that define groups relevant to verbs |
does not start new line no new line start inline start not nls
|
| Text divisions that typically do not begin on a new line |
no new line end does not end new line inline end not nle
|
| Text divisions whose termination does not force the next text division to start a new line |
start new line new line start nls ^\n |
| Text divisions that typically begin on a new line |
new line end end new line nle \n$ |
| Text divisions whose termination forces the next text division to start a new line |
start extra leading extra leading start space above |
| Text divisions that typically begin with extra leading (a horizontal line of white space) |
end extra leading extra leading end space below |
| Text divisions that typically end with extra leading (a horizontal line of white space) |
start new column new column start ncs |
| Text divisions that typically begin on a new column |
new column end end new column nce |
| Text divisions whose termination forces the next text division to start a new column |
start new page new page start nps |
| Text divisions that typically begin on a new page |
new page end end new page npe |
| Text divisions whose termination forces the next text division to start a new page |
logical conceptual |
| Text division is based on logical units that do not depend upon scripta for their meaning, e.g., sentence, paragraph. Contrasts with physical, scriptum-based divisions. |
scriptum scriptum based object physical material |
| Text division is based on a physical feature in the scriptum, e.g., page, column, line. Contrasts with logical divisions. |
annotation |
| Text division is an annotation. That is, it comments on (and therefore assumes the proximate existence of) some other text. Most annotations are connected with the commented text either by placement or some signalling device (e.g., footnote signals). Excluded from this category are texts that summarize another text. That is, an annotation either adds new material or attempts to make explicit one or more points that are deemed implicit. |
status |
|
|
base |
|
|
root |
|
|
^. start1 a |
|
|
^.. start2 ab |
|
|
^... start3 abc |
|
|
.$ end1 z |
|
|
..$ end2 yz |
|
|
...$ end3 xyz |
|
|
textual passage subject |
| Verbs whose subjects are specific passages of textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources). |
textual passage object |
| verbs whose objects are specific passages of textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources). |
whole textual artefact subject |
| Verbs whose subjects are entire textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources). |
whole textual artefact object |
| verbs whose objects are entire textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources). |
textual artefact subject textual passage or artefact subject textual artefact or passage subject |
| Verbs whose subjects are entire textual artefacts or specific passages of textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources). |
textual artefact object textual passage or artefact object textual artefact or passage object |
| Verbs whose objects are entire textual artefacts or specific passages of textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources). |
textual entity subject |
| verbs whose subjects are creators of texts (persons, organizations) or whole textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources) |
textual entity object |
| verbs whose objects are creators of texts (persons, organizations) or whole textual artefacts (scripta, works, versions, sources) |
textual subject |
| verbs whose subjects are text makers or textual artefacts |
textual object |
| verbs whose objects are text makers or textual artefacts |
claim object |
| verbs whose objects are claims |
zero objects |
| verbs that do not allow objects |
one object |
| verbs that require only one object |
one or more objects |
| verbs that must take one or more objects |
near verbatim |
| verbs where each pair of subject and object textual passages have an agreement of 70% or greater. If subject and object are in the same language, the quantity is measured by agreement after normalization, ignoring accentuation, capitalization, punctuation, and word spaces. If they are in different languages, the quantity is measured by the number of words in one source that correspond to words in the other. |
similar |
| verbs where each pair of subject and object textual passages have an agreement of 40% to 70% See description for verbatim. |
somewhat similar |
| verbs where each pair of subject and object textual passages have an agreement of 5% to 40% See description for verbatim. |
cf |
| verbs that indicate a comparison between subject and object |
symmetry |
| verbs that permit symmetrical inferences If X [verb] Y then Y [verb] X. |
transitivity |
| verbs that permit transitive inferences If X [verb] Y and Y [verb] Z then X [verb] Z. |
subject postdates object |
| verbs whose subjects must postdate objects If a textual passage is said to quote from another, then the former must postdate the latter. |
one locus one at ref |
| verbs that require only one |
one or more loci one or more at refs |
| verbs that must take one or more |
zero or more in langs allows in lang |
| verbs that permit the element in-lang |