<domain>
<domain> (domain of use) describes the most important social context in which the text was realized or for which it is intended, for example private vs. public, education, religion, etc. 15.2.1 The Text Description | |||||||||
Module | corpus — 15 Language Corpora | ||||||||
Attributes | In addition to global attributes
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Used by | |||||||||
May contain | core: abbr address cb choice date distinct email emph expan foreign gap gloss index lb measure measureGrp mentioned milestone name note num pb ptr ref rs soCalled term time title dictionaries: lang msdescription: catchwords depth dimensions height heraldry locus locusGrp material origDate origPlace secFol signatures stamp watermark width namesdates: addName affiliation bloc country district forename genName geo geogFeat geogName nameLink offset orgName persName placeName region roleName settlement state surname textcrit: witDetail | ||||||||
Declaration |
element domain { att.global.attributes, attribute type { data.enumerated }?, macro.phraseSeq.limited } | ||||||||
Example | <domain type="domestic"/> <domain type="rel">religious broadcast</domain> | ||||||||
Note | Usually empty, unless some further clarification of the type
attribute is needed, in which case it may contain running
prose. The list presented here is primarily for illustrative
purposes. |