Library of Formatting Examples:Test Page/C: Difference between revisions

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{{LOFE:Navbar|prev=Test Page/B|next=Test Page/A|cat=Test Page}}
{{LOFE:Navbar|prev= Test Page/B |next=Test Page/A|cat=Test Page}}
{{LOFE:Example start|image-filename=101-13A.png|image-max=lofe-x40|text-min=lofe-m50}}
{{LOFE:Example start|image-filename=101-09A.png|iw=30|tw=40|size=small|display=side-by-side}}
  "Here they all are," said the minister, pointing to an upper
  {{LOFE:Tag|i}}For ten years the Greeks had besieged Troy, and on the
  shelf on which stood about sixty volumes. "The seven books
  tenth they took and utterly destroyed that ancient city. The
  on which the Spirit of God has shed its brightest light are:
  inhabitants who had escaped captivity and the sword, wandered
  {{LOFE:Tag|i}}The Delights of Wisdom in Conjugal Love{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}; {{LOFE:Tag|i}}Heaven and
in exile to many quarters of the earth. Now the chief
  Hell{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}; {{LOFE:Tag|i}}the Apocalypse Explained{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}; {{LOFE:Tag|i}}An Exposition of the Inward
  band of exiles was led by Æneas, son of Venus and Anchises,
  Sense{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}; {{LOFE:Tag|i}}On the Divine Love{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}; {{LOFE:Tag|i}}The True Christian Religion{{LOFE:Tag|/i}};
and son-in-law of Priam, king of Troy.{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}
  {{LOFE:Tag|i}}The Angelic Wisdom of the Omnipotence, Omniscience,
  and Omnipresence of those who share the Eternity
{{LOFE:Tag|i}}After many adventures on land and sea, Æneas came, in
  and Immensity of God{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}.
the sixth year, to Sicily, where he was kindly entertained by
Acestes, king of that land, and where his aged father died
and was buried. Thence setting sail in the summer of the
seventh year, he approached the shores of Africa. Here a
violent storm arose which scattered and all but destroyed the
Trojan ships. Æneas, with a number of his companions,
  was cast upon a desert coast, where they passed the night
in gloomy forebodings. In the early morning, Æneas and
Achates set forth to explore the land, and came to the newly
founded city of Carthage.{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}
{{LOFE:Tag|i}}Now Phœnician Dido, also, with a band of exiles, had fled
from her native Tyre, to escape the persecutions of her brother,
Pygmalion, who had already slain Sychæus, her husband.
And to the land of Africa had she come, and built her a city,
  even the city of Carthage.{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}
  {{LOFE:Tag|i}}And so these two, Æneas, prince of Troy, and Dido, fugitive
  from Tyre, now meet in distant Africa and live the
  tragedy which fate has held in store.{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}
{{LOFE:Example middle}}
{{LOFE:Example middle}}
== Lists ==
=== Italicized paragraphs ===
That in-line list uses semi-colons instead of commas. Note that the commas in the
When entire paragraphs are italicized, the Guidelines require us to tag each one separately. This also applies to the other inline tags: boldface, small-caps, font change, and gesperrt.
last title are part of the title, and must be included within the markups.
{{LOFE:Example end}}
{{LOFE:Example end}}

Revision as of 09:04, 5 November 2025

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<i>For ten years the Greeks had besieged Troy, and on the
tenth they took and utterly destroyed that ancient city. The
inhabitants who had escaped captivity and the sword, wandered
in exile to many quarters of the earth. Now the chief
band of exiles was led by Æneas, son of Venus and Anchises,
and son-in-law of Priam, king of Troy.</i>

<i>After many adventures on land and sea, Æneas came, in
the sixth year, to Sicily, where he was kindly entertained by
Acestes, king of that land, and where his aged father died
and was buried. Thence setting sail in the summer of the
seventh year, he approached the shores of Africa. Here a
violent storm arose which scattered and all but destroyed the
Trojan ships. Æneas, with a number of his companions,
was cast upon a desert coast, where they passed the night
in gloomy forebodings. In the early morning, Æneas and
Achates set forth to explore the land, and came to the newly
founded city of Carthage.</i>

<i>Now Phœnician Dido, also, with a band of exiles, had fled
from her native Tyre, to escape the persecutions of her brother,
Pygmalion, who had already slain Sychæus, her husband.
And to the land of Africa had she come, and built her a city,
even the city of Carthage.</i>

<i>And so these two, Æneas, prince of Troy, and Dido, fugitive
from Tyre, now meet in distant Africa and live the
tragedy which fate has held in store.</i>

Italicized paragraphs

When entire paragraphs are italicized, the Guidelines require us to tag each one separately. This also applies to the other inline tags: boldface, small-caps, font change, and gesperrt.