File last modified
For other MEC files, see the MEC Index page.
{ = <u> } = </u>When the end of underlining coincides with a punctuation mark, include the mark inside the underlining:
{Barth.}
ä | ä |
ë | ë |
ö | ö |
ü | ü |
Ü | Ü |
é | é |
É | É |
è | è |
â | â |
ç | ç |
æ | æ |
Æ | Æ |
ð | ð |
þ | þ |
Þ | Þ |
3-like "yogh" | &yogh; |
This means that you should also enter the ampersand as an entity: | |
& | & |
The cards are various and not completely predictable. If you meet one that doesn't fit the pattern, or contains something odd, do the best you can to get the information in, and add a comment of your own in the comments field. Most of the cards, however, should contain nothing that doesn't fit nicely into the fields that are offered.
1400 a1400 ?a1400 a1500(?a1450) c1225(?OE) 1200(OE) -?-(?a1400) v.d.(a1400) ?v.d.(v.d.) ?c1200(?1173-4)Notice that there are *no spaces* in dates, and no periods after "ante" or "circa" (a1400 c1400).
Examples: Chaucer Lydg. Hoccl. Trev. ?Nassyngton Mannyng Malory Audelay ?C.d'Orl. [="ascribed to Charles of Orleans"]
Wycl.Friars ["Wycl." means "Wycliffite"] Orm. ["Orm." means "Ormulum"] Cato(1)
Doc.Jocelin [Jocelin is not an author] Recipe in James Cat. [James is not an author]
If the card uses "-----" to indicate "Ibid.," just enter ----- (five dashes) in the WORK field.
Spaces are used in WORK only to separate two words that, if not spaced, would result in two lower-case letters, or a lower- and upper-case letter from different words, being adjacent. If there is intervening punctuation, there is no space. If there is a parenthesis, there is no space. If one of the words is abbreviated in caps, and the next word starts in caps, there is no space. E.g.:
Recipe Painting(1) in Archaeol.J.1 (3 spaces) ^ ^ ^ Doc.in Bateson B.Cust.1;2 (2 spaces) ^ ^ Will Masey in LCRS 30 (4 spaces) ^ ^ ^ ^ PUsurer(3) (0 spaces) Rev.HWoman (0 spaces) Rev.Jul.Norwich (0 spaces) Ripley CAlch. (1 space) ^
(Trin-C) ...record as... Trin-C (Bod 754) ...record as... Bod 754 (Corp-C) ...record as... Corp-CSometimes an editor's name appears in the parens following a colon. There should be no spaces before or after the colon:
(Sln:Brown) ...record as... Sln:Brown (Lamb 6:Brie) ...record as... Lamb 6:Brie (Hrl 2256:Kingsf.)...record as... Hrl 2256:Kingsf.If parens appear *within* the abbreviation, keep them:
(Hrl 413(2)) ...record as... Hrl 413(2)
These are the stencil fields, running across the top of the entry screen. After that....
+ P. Landon, The arms of the University of Oxford. (1910). + Kolbing, op.cit. + Dan Michel's Ayenbite of inwyt, ed. R. Morris, EETS 23(1866).Some SOURCEs are descriptions, or statements about the source, rather than editions:
+ S. Lysons, Copy of an entry on the clause roll 31 Henr.VI (1817). + Film of the Scale of perfection in MS Hrl.6579; in poss. of MED. + Narrationes concerning penitence in MS Wor.F.172; transcr. W. H. Hulme; in poss. of MED.In entering names ("P. F. Schaffner"), put a space after each initial:
W. H. Hulme, R. Morris, R. J. Robbins, etc. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^End the SOURCE field with a period, even if the card omits it.
67-98 23-45, left cols. odd pages 45-75 45-75, lower half appendix B, 435*-57* passimEnd the REF field with a period, even if the card omits it.
Examples: In A-Sn dated a1450. In L-R, stencil refers to A. H. Smith, {Big Book of Middle English}, 2, 325-60.
[BR 1234] ...place in NOTES as BR 1234 [W 6.34] ...place in NOTES as W 6.34
The most elaborate examples will probably be "Vrr." notes. Since these contain dates and abbreviations like those at the head of the record, they should be treated the same way as regards spacing: no spaces in dates, no spaces around colons in abbreviations. E.g. a1500 (Magd-O:Lester)
N.B. "Vrr." notes will often contain bracketed use notes. Keep them here in the NOTES field and retain the brackets.
Examples of NOTES:
+ Final bib replace all CG entries with this. + P. 45b of 1959 bib. + Vrr.: a1500 (Ashm); ?a1500 (Git) from Dyboski & Arend, op.cit., fns. [in A-G, these are taken from Jones, op.cit., vrr. in notes].
pfs 1 Dec 97