Contains bibliographic elements describing an item (e.g. an article or poem) published within a monograph, journal, or periodical and not as an independent publication.
Information about an annotation file associated with the text.
This element groups information about annotation documents associated with the text.
Supplies information about the availability of a text, for example, any extensions on its use or distribution, its copyright status, etc.
Contains a bibliographic citation for a text which has been previously encoded in electronic form. This element contains the same elements as the <fileDesc> element, and is intended to include the header of the electronic text from which the current document is derived.
Defines the scope of a bibliographic reference, for example as a list of page numbers, or a named subdivision of a larger work.
A structured bibliographic citation, in which only bibliographic sub-elements appear and in a specified order.
Contains the count of bytes in the file containing the text together with its markup.
Specifies one or more defined categories within some taxonomy or text typology.
An individual descriptive category or feature-value pair.
Summarizes a particular change or correction made to a particular version of an electronic text which is shared between several researchers.
Contains a series of <category> elements, defining the classification codes used for texts within the corpus.
The CES level of conformance for the text or corpus.
Specifies a set of correction practices applied in creating one or more components of the corpus.
Contains information about the origination of a text.
An electronic address of the person or institution who distributes the text or corpus. Note that more than one occurrence of this tag can appear, so that multiple addresses (possibly of different types) can be included.
Provides bibliographic details for an edition of some text.
Provides details of editorial principles and practices applied during the encoding of a text.
Documents the relationship between an electronic text and the source or sources from which it was derived.
The size of the electronic text as stored on some carrier medium.
A full bibliographic description of the corpus itself or of a text within it.
A list of keywords or phrases identifying the topic or nature of a text, each of which is tagged as a term.
a number (e.g., ISBN) used to identify a bibliographic item.
Groups information relating to the publication or distribution of a bibliographic item.
Groups information describing the languages, sublanguages, registers, dialects etc. represented within a text.
Characterizes a language, sublanguage, register, dialect, etc., used within a single text.
Contains bibliographic elements describing an item (e.g. a book or journal) published as an independent item (i.e. as a separate physical object).
Specifies a set of normalization practices applied in creating one or more components of the corpus.
Provides further information about various aspects of a text, specifically the language used, the situation and date of its production, the participants and their setting, and a descriptive classification for it.
A calendar date in any format.
Groups information concerning the publication or distribution of the corpus and its constituent texts.
The proper name of a person, place or institution.
Specifies editorial practice adopted with respect to quotation marks in the original.
Specifies how canonical references are constructed for this text.
Supplies information about any person or institution responsible for the intellectual content of a text, edition, or electronic transcription.
Summarizes the revision history for a file.
Supplies a bibliographic description of the copy text(s) from which an electronic text was derived or generated.
Supplies information about the usage of a specific element within the corpus or text with which this header is associated.
This element is used differently in corpus and in text headers. In the corpus header, it is used to list all the element names actually used within the corpus, together with a brief description of its function. In text headers, the same element is used to specify the number of XML elements actually tagged within each text. In both cases it consists of a number of <tagUsage> elements,
Defines a typology used to classify texts.
Groups information which describes the nature or topic of a text in terms of a standard classification scheme, thesaurus, etc.
Groups information concerning the title of the corpus or the individual text and its constituent texts.
Gives information about a translation of the text. The global lang attribute and the wsd attribute are required on this tag.
Groups information about existing translations of the text.
Characterizes a character set used within a single text.
Groups information describing the character set(s) used within a text.
Abstract element used by the particDesc. This element will actually be replaced by xces:person or xces:personGrp elements.
Base type used by the abstract element xces:participant
A single participant. Extends participantType to include attributes for the age, role, and sex of the participant
A group of two or more participants. Extends the xces:participantType to include attributes to represent the age, role, sex, and size of the group.
Substitution group element for xces:participant.
Substitution group element for xces:participant.
Description of the participants involved.
Describes the setting or settings within which a language interaction takes place with a series of <setting> elements.