Unless we have specific instructions otherwise I think I would just
replace it with an asterisk. After all, it just indicates a footnote and
an asterisk does that just as well.
On 9/6/2016 11:41 PM, Cindy Rosenthal wrote:
†
It sounds like a dagger, but now I can't find one on my keyboard or my symbols chart to insert. But I goggled and here's one I copied dn pasted that maybe you can use if you need it.: † ( interesting timing as we were just discussing footnote symbols.
I don't know a keyboard shortcut, though since I can only find the double dagger on Word's symbols chart
I'll google again and see what I an find smile
Cindy
On Tue, Sep 6, 2016 at 8:19 PM, Estelnalissi <airadil@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:airadil@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Dear Sandi and Katherine, Judy and Deborah,
Thank you for replying re the cross mark/dagger? and for the
footnote information.
Sandi, I believe you're right.
When I came upon the problem it was like Star Trek, Red alert! Red
alert! After I sent off my query I continued proofreading and
found these footnotes at the bottom of the page:
* See Kenney, op. cit., p. 745 foil.
+ See Orpen, Ireland under the Normans, Vol. 1, 124. On the
position of women.
The plus sign is in keeping with your solution. I'll put a plus
sign with spaces around it in the text.
This is my night for new characters. Does anyone hear know German.
In another book I'm proofreading a
German word has a capital B in the middle of a word with a tail at
the bottom of the straight vertical line of the B. I don't know
what that is or how to reproduce it, either. it comes right after
a u oomlout, and at least I know how to make those.
Katherine, you're so right. Many things I'm coming upon in these
special niche books look like they should be scannoes even though
they aren't. In the Irish book, several names have the second
letter capitalized instead of the first as in the word gCaor.
That's what makes these books take forever and it can't be about
the numbers with me.
Deborah and Judy, I wasn't putting brackets around the footnotes.
I'm glad that in keeping up with the list I read your instructions
so will get them right in this book.]
It's so impressive that bookshare has the kinds of books worthy of
being resources for college and graduate papers, the shorter and
the longer, in depth ones. The scholarly books are labors of love
and will be there when just the right person needs high level
information.
I'm not sure if my book fits the history and nonfiction categories
or if it could be considered a reference book. Are reference books
only like dictionaries and thesauruses? Every phrase in my book is
packed with information with, it seems, not a spare word. Just
wondering.
Always with love,
Lissi
-----Original Message----- From: Sandra Ryan
Sent: Tuesday, September 06, 2016 9:54 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: What is this cross and how do I make
it?
Lissi,
Is it a footnote? It sounds rather more elaborate than what I've
seen, but
it appears to me the * is a footnote, and the + may be a second
footnote? I
put in a plus for the cross, but perhaps they've used a dagger?
Interesting
question.
Sandi
-----Original Message-----
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
[mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>] On Behalf Of
Estelnalissi
Sent: Tuesday, September 6, 2016 8:51 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] What is this cross and how do I make it?
Dear Booksharian Friends,
The very scholarly book on The Story of the Irish People, (don't
let the
title fool you into thinking it's a homey, easy on the mind book)
contains a
punctuation mark I haven't found before and I don't know how to
reproduce it
for my file. Evan's scanner thought it was a lower case f, but it
looks to
me like a cross as tall as a capital letter but extending as far
below the
line as the tail on a lower case y.
Below are the sentences where it appears. [cross] shows you
exactly where
the symbol, if there is one, should be.
The Norman observers speak, too, of lax morality * --monks and priests
marrying, the laity living loose lives, but this is debatable and the
animadversions of Lanfranc and Saint Bernard may have arisen, at
least in
part, from unfamiliarity with traditional Irish marriage customs.
[cross].
Church discipline was undoubtedly lax.
Thanks in advance.
You haven't heard much from me because everything has been running so
smoothly lately. From my point of view the staff is taking care of
us where
it counts. The wide selection available on the check out page is a
dream
come true and my feeling we're dwindling, unnoticed, is gone.
We're thriving
so well we're in a position to have room to welcome new
volunteers, fresh
talent. I'll be interested to see how our total of books
contributed to
this year compares to last year's. I hope we top it.
With over 406,000 books in Bookshare's library, Evan and I still
have stacks
and stacks of books he wants to scan and read and I want to
proofread. My
output hasn't been stellar but I have 4 months to build it up and
I'm not
bypassing harder books like this one. I may not reach three digits
but I'm
moving in that direction with concentration and pleasure one word
at a time.
Enthusiastically and Always With Love,
Lissi
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