Part 19
Tillinghast, C. B., p. 111.
Title, defined, p. 14.
— its influence on entry, p. 15, §§ 1, 3, 104.
Title editions, § 177.
Title entries, arrangement of, § 237.
Title entry, p. 12, §§ 68–83.
Title page, loss of, § 68.
Title pages, double, § 91.
— bibliographers’ cult of, p. 15.
Title references, §§ 81–91.
— analytical, § 127.
Titles, abbreviations in, p. 124.
— alternative, §§ 161, 205.
— arrangement of, §§ 240–252.
— exact copying of, § 165, p. 101.
— first words of, to be retained, § 162
— how to supply missing, § 68.
Titles, not to be taken for names, § 19 _e_.
— style of, §§ 148–175.
Titles of honor, p. 104, 125.
— arrangement of, § 224, p. 118.
— capitals for, §§ 205, 206, p. 101.
— italicised in headings, § 131.
— not italicised in titles, § 174.
Towns, § 40.
Toy, C. H., p. 111.
Tract catalog, p. 126.
Transactions of societies, §§ 56, 73.
— their subject entry, § 92.
Translations, §§ 168, 169, pp. 99, 105.
— arrangement of, § 245, p. 106.
— of anonymous works, § 72.
Translators, §§ 18, 60, pp. 103, 105.
Transliteration, §§ 36, 37, 38, 175, 179, p. 102.
Transliteration committee of A. L. A., report of, p. 108.
Treaties, § 50.
Trials, §§ 64, 113, 114, p. 100.
Type, §§ 130–134.
Typographical form. _See_ Size.
Ü. _See_ Umlaut.
Umlaut, German, pp. 103, 104, 107.
Undated editions, arrangement of, § 243.
Uniformity, importance and unimportance of, § 129.
— want of, in catalogs, § 97.
Universities, § 56.
Unmarried women, titles of, § 142 _f_, _g_.
Unnecessary words, to be omitted, §§ 152, 153.
Van, § 24 _b_, _c_.
Vernacular, to be used in spelling, § 27, p. 101.
Vessels. _See_ Ships.
Volume, defined, p. 15.
Volumes, number of, § 195, p. 102.
Von, § 24 _b_, _c_.
Water lines, § 196 (note).
Weekly, § 78.
Whitney, W: D., p. 111.
Williams, Monier, p. 111.
Wister, _Mrs._ A. L., her translations, § 60 (18).
Women, reference books on, p. 133.
— married, §§ 20 _c_, 60, 142, p. 100.
— unmarried, titles of, § 142 _f_, _g_.
Word books, p. 107.
Young Men’s Christian Associations, § 56.
* * * * * *
Transcriber’s note:
Original spelling and grammar have been generally retained, with some exceptions noted below.
I produced the cover image and hereby assign it to the public domain.
Large curly brackets that graphically indicate combination of information on two or more lines of text have been removed. The text was modified, if necessary, to retain the original meaning. In most cases, as on page 8, this was trivial. However, the task was not trivial for the chart beginning at the bottom of page 11, so errors of interpretation are not impossible. For reference, the original image is shown below.
The original Table of Contents failed to connect reliably with the text. The original has been severely overhauled, without further comment here.
Precise horizontal spacing of words is essential in this book. However, this has not been implemented in this simple text edition.
Page 12. The word ‹unsorbordinated› was changed to ‹unsubordinated›.
Page 15. During the process of producing an ebook, headings are coded in HTML as h1–h6 elements, with h1 representing the highest level in an outline. A new h2 level heading, ‹ENTRY.›, was inserted on page 15. A new h4 level heading, ‹CATALOGUE.›, was inserted after the existing h3 heading ‹I. AUTHOR-ENTRY.›.
Page 16. The existing h4 heading ‹AUTHORS.› was changed to ‹A. AUTHORS.›.
Page 17. The h5 level heading ‹1. PERSONAL.› was changed to ‹(a.) PERSONAL.›. The h6 heading ‹_a. Under whom as author._› was changed to ‹(i.) _Under whom as author._›. Subsequent entries in these lists were enumerated similarly, e.g. on page 20 where ‹_b._› was changed to ‹(ii.)›.
Page 21. The phrase ‹Grässe’s ‘Lehrbuch› was changed to ‹Grässe’s “Lehrbuch›.
Page 27. The phrase ‹Tilsley’s ‘Digest› was changed to ‹Tilsley’s “Digest›.
Page 32. The phrase ‹the Christain name› was changed to ‹the Christian name›.
Page 37. The word ‹vesssels› was changed to ‹vessels›.
Page 38. A new h4 heading was inserted: ‹CATALOGUE.›.
Page 45. The h3 heading ‹III. SUBJECTS.› was changed to ‹III. SUBJECT-ENTRY.› A new h4 level heading ‹CATALOGUE.› was inserted before the catalogue.
Page 46. The h5 level heading ‹A. ENTRIES CONSIDERED SEPARATELY.› was changed to ‹(a.) ENTRIES CONSIDERED SEPARATELY.›, and the h5 level heading on page 57 was changed similarly. The h6 level heading ‹1. CHOICE BETWEEN DIFFERENT SUBJECTS.› was changed to ‹(i.) CHOICE BETWEEN DIFFERENT SUBJECTS.›.
Page 51. The phrase ‹as «Moral philosophy» to «Ethics» or to «Morals, Intellectual» or «Mental philosophy» to «Intellect» or «Mind, Natural philosophy» to «Physics, Sanitary science» to «Hygiene, Scientific men» to «Scientists», «Social science» to «Sociology»;› was changed to ‹as «Moral philosophy» to «Ethics» or to «Morals, Intellectual»; or «Mental philosophy» to «Intellect»; or «Mind, Natural philosophy» to «Physics, Sanitary science»; or «Hygiene, Scientific men» to «Scientists»; or «Social science» to «Sociology»;›. Specifically, semicolons have been introduced to improve the syntax of this complicated phrase.
Page 54. The word ‹slighest› was changed to ‹slightest›.
Pages 58–117. Several instances of originally _gesperrt_ text, in which the spacing between letters has been increased, have been changed to bold. Gesperrt text—the HTML/CSS attribute letter-spacing—is not yet supported by many epub reader browsers. Two instances of gesperrt text have been preserved. On page 64, the name ‹«Guizot», François Pierre Guillaume› has been rendered herein with a clumsy artificial gesperrt, namely by adding explicit spaces [u202f narrow no-break space] between the letters of ‹F r a n ç o i s P i e r r e›. On page 84, the name ‹«Franklin», John D a v i d› has been rendered herein with similar artificial gesperrt.
Page 61. The h2 level heading ‹VI. STYLE.› was changed to ‹STYLE.›. A new h3 heading was inserted: ‹CATALOGUE.›.
Page 62. The h3 level heading ‹STYLE.› was changed to ‹VI. STYLE.›.
Page 81. The h4 heading ‹H. PUNCTUATION, ETC.› was changed to ‹I. PUNCTUATION, ETC.›.
Page 83. The h4 heading ‹I. ARRANGEMENT.› was changed to ‹J. ARRANGEMENT.›.
Pages 94–96. In § 258, the two example catalogues were originally printed side by side: (1.) dictionary catalogue with a “bit of classification”, on the left, and (2.) dictionary catalogue, “pure and simple”, on the right. Semantically, these are two independent lists, which do not comprise a table. To display them side by side in an ebook using the coding methods currently available to us is problematic. Therefore, catalogue 2 has been moved after catalogue 1, and new headings have been inserted. In catalogue 1, the three subjects ‹Satire.›, ‹Sonnets.›, and ‹Wit and humor.› were subordinated under ‹Literature.›, correcting an evident error in the original.
Page 98. The h4 heading ‹J. _Etc._› was changed to ‹K. _Etc._›.
Page 103. The word ‹noticeable› was originally printed on two lines as ‹notice,› ‹able›.
Page 106. The word ‹arrranged› was changed to ‹arranged›.
Pages 109–110. The table is semantically three columns but was printed in two columns, so appears in the original to have six columns. Herein the table has been restored to three columns. On page 109, first column, seventh entry ‹an› is changed to ‹au›.
Page 117. The quotation mark in ‹“A single ful name› has no mate; its mate possibly belongs after ‹John.›.