This is an ARCHIVED VERSION of the 2000 electronic edition of the MARC 21 Concise Formats. Please see www.loc.gov/marc/concise/ for the most up-to-date version of the electronic MARC 21 Concise Formats.
This section describes and illustrates models for recording data in multiple scripts in MARC records. One script may be considered the primary script of the data content of the record, even though other scripts are also used for data content. (Note: ASCII is used for the structural elements of the record, and most coded data are also specified within the ASCII range of characters.) The general models for multiscript data that are followed with MARC 21 are described below.
Multiscript Record Models
Model A data in the regular fields is linked to the data in 880 fields by a subfield $6 that occurs in both of the associated fields. Specifications for field 880 are under that field; description of subfield $6 is in the Control Subfields section; specifications for character sets and repertoires for scripts are found in MARC 21 Specifications for Record Structure, Character Sets, and Exchange Media.
Example Conventions
Although the data in the following records is taken from actual classification
records, these records are included for illustration purposes only and are not
necessarily usable for classification purposes. The creator of the classification
data is not specified in these sample records. Escape sequences are not included
in the example records.
040 |
##$a*** $brus $c*** |
||
084 |
0#$alcc |
[Library of Congress Classification] |
|
153 |
##$6880-01 $aHA1 $cHA4737 $j<Caption in Cyrillic> |
||
880 |
##$6153-01/(B $aHA1 $cHA4737 $jStatistics |
The following example of a multiscript record follows Model A. In this example,
field 153 is expressed in both Hebrew and Latin scripts. Note that the second
880 field is not linked to an associated field. The occurrence number here is
00.
The directionality of the Hebrew text in the examples is right-to-left within each subfield, but the subfields themselves have been recorded left-to-right. The actual input of all the data is in logical order (first-to-last), parts of which may be displayed in various directions depending upon the script and the display interface.
084 |
0#$alcc |
[Library of Congress Classification] |
|
153 |
##$6880-01 $aPR1588 $hEnglish literature $hAnglo-Saxon literature $hIndividual authors and works $hBeowulf $hCriticism $jLanguage, grammar, etc. |
||
730 |
00$aBeowulf $xLanguage $0(DLC)sh#85013267 |
||
880 |
##$6153-01/(2/r $a<Caption in Hebrew script linked to associated field> |
||
880 |
##$6680-00/(2/r $a<Scope note in Hebrew script> |
This example is a multiscript record that follows Model B. In this example, the language of the textual portions of the record is Russian (Cyrillic script). However, the language of the coded information is English (Latin script).
040 | ##$a*** $brus $c*** |
084 | 0#$addc $b<Title in Cyrillic> $c21 |
153 | ##$a006.31 $h<Caption hierarchy in Cyrillic> $h<Caption hierarchy in Cyrillic> $j<Caption in Cyrillic> |
680 | 0#$i<Explanatory text in Cyrillic> |