F1 Self-Evaluation Project Explanations/pages 101-110

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101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110

101

Both the book title and the chapter information are "Major Divisions," so precede each of them with 4 blank lines. Separate the components of the chapter heading with one blank line, then leave 2 blank lines above the body of the text.

None of those headings are in small-caps; they are all upper-case.

Unless asked otherwise, the first word or words of a new chapter are changed to upper and lower case, not small caps, even if they appear as small caps in the original.

102

The italics paragraph near the top is wrappable, in smaller type, surrounded by extra white space, and printed as a hanging indent: a classic Block Quote. It's also preceded by extra whitespace and has a Roman Numeral identifier, so it's most likely a Section heading and should be preceded by two blank lines.

Everything except the Roman Numerals in that heading is in italics, and the Roman Numerals are a separate sentence for formatting purposes, so enclose all of the italics in one set of tags. That includes the ending period and the numerals of the dates.


103

The terms in the first pair of parentheses are in an in-line list, so tag them separately. In the second pair of parenthesis, "var." is not in italics and the comma just before it, which is not part of the name, goes OUTSIDE the tags.

What makes this page a bit tricky is the italicized "a" further down. Single italicized letters are hard to spot, especially when they are adjacent to upright text, and even more so when you've just finished formatting something like those lists, which require some extra attention.


104

A straightforward page with some italics and two footnotes.


105

The lines of centered text are quotations from verse, so enclose each in no-wraps and leave them left-justified.

In the last footnote, "Gloss." is an abbreviation, so the period goes INSIDE the italics tags.


106

In the last line of the text body, only the first half of the word is in italics; the hyphen and the rest of the word are not.

In the footnotes, some italicized words are abbreviated, and those periods are parts of those words, so they go INSIDE the tags.

The dot above the "i" tells us that the short Roman Numerals are in lower-case, not small-caps.


107

Each line begins with a capitalized letter, so this is Metrical Drama and belongs in no-wraps. Since there are no stand-alone Stage Directions on the page, just enclose the entire page in no-wraps.

The speakers' names are complete sentences, even if they are not abbreviations, so the periods go INSIDE the italics tags.

Some lines didn't fit on one printed line: bring those spill-over words up or down to the lines to which they belong.


108

Full-page illustration. Leave one blank line above the tag, so that it is not accidentally concatenated with the text on the preceding page during Post-Processing.

The caption is in mixed-case small-caps. It's a complete sentence, so the period goes INSIDE the tags.


109

The italicized words at the beginnings of some lines are complete sentences for formatting purposes, so the periods go INSIDE the tags. The em-dashes go OUTSIDE.


110

Full-page illustration. Leave one blank line above the tag, so that it is not accidentally concatenated with the text on the preceding page during Post-Processing.

The caption is partly in mixed-case small-caps, but some of it is in regular text. When marking the small-caps, leave the ending period OUTSIDE the tags. Also leave the parentheses outside the tags.