@article{Lehmann_1995, title={The noble art of abbreviating}, volume={1}, url={https://tidsskrift.dk/pdia/article/view/15459}, abstractNote={<p><span style="font-family: Calibri; font-size: medium;">Originally, this paper was intended to have as its modest subtitle the words: “Some simple remarks’’, for, what will be presented, will not be anything like either a broad or a thorough analysis of rhetoric practice or principle in Antiquity in abbreviating procedures. What I shall try to do is - in a very simple, straightforward and elementary way - to look at a few instances where texts attributed to Severian of Gabala appear in more than one version, usually in what may be considered a “full-length” version and some kind of abbreviated form.</span></p><p><span style="font-family: Calibri; font-size: medium;">On my way through the examples I considered more than once the possibility of transferring the adjective “simple” from the subtitle to the main title, having ascertained that the procedure of abbreviating very often is quite a simple one. So the art of abbreviating is, maybe, not always a noble one; on the other hand, the abbreviated form o f a text often has a particular strength of expression, entirely its own, so I left the notion of “noble” in the title; but I certainly ask and warn my readers to retain the notion of “simple” as a subtitle for what follows.</span></p>}, number={1}, journal={Proceedings of the Danish Institute at Athens}, author={Lehmann, Henning}, year={1995}, month={May}, pages={221–227} }