There are many ways to search the Oracc corpora. This page describes how to search the transliterations, translations, and catalogue data. Instructions on searching the glossaries and on advanced search are given on separate pages.
General principles | Searching transliterations | Searching translations | Searching catalogue data
Read the help section about the search zone before you begin.
You can use the search box in the header to search for sequences of signs within the transliterations. However, searching for Akkadian or Sumerian words, regardless of spelling, is best done within the glossaries.
To search within the transliterations, type !txt
followed by a space and the
sequence of signs you want to find into the search box and click "Search". The lines containing that sequence will be displayed in the the Main Pane, with the relevant word highlighted. You can choose whether to see the results within lines, sentences, or keyword-in-context.
Click on the coloured designation (publication number or composition name) to the right to see the whole text of each tablet or composition found. Place the cursor over a word to see its outline glossary entry, and click on the word to go to its full glossary entry. In some Oracc Projects you can sort the found records by genre, period, and provenance as described for Outline Mode.
Use the following conventions when you type in the search box depending on whether or not you have ticked the Unicode box:
ḫ
, ŋ
, ṣ
, š
, and ṭ
in the usual way. You can find suitable Unicode fonts and keyboards elsewhere on this site.ša₂
and ša₃
)l:
(ell then colon) (e.g., l:ŠA₃
finds all occurrences of ŠÀ in logograms)s:
(s colon) (e.g., s:ŠA₃
finds all occurrences of ŠÀ in logograms and syllabic writings lìb)h
for ḫ (e.g., ha
finds ḫa)j
for ŋ (e.g., jen
finds ŋen)s,
(s comma) for ṣ (e.g., s,a
finds ṣa)sz
for š (e.g., sza
finds ša)t,
(t comma) for ṭ (e.g., t,a
finds ṭa)sza2
finds šá and sza3
finds šà)l:
(ell then colon) (e.g., l:SZA3
finds all occurrences of ŠÀ in logograms)s:
(s colon) (e.g., s:SZA3
finds all occurrences of ŠÀ in logograms and syllabic writings lìb)-
to connect signs within words (e.g., i-na
finds the sequence i-na in any word)_
to connect adjacent signs in different words (e.g., i_na
finds all words that end with -i and that are followed by a word beginning with na-)~
to connect adjacent signs, whether they are in the same word or not (e.g., i~na finds both of the above)There is a list of unicode characters for cuneiform transliteration elsewhere on these help pages, and an explanation of the difference between unicode and ASCII transliteration on the Cuneiform Revealed [http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/saao/knpp/cuneiformrevealed/aboutcuneiform/computercuneiform] website.
You can use the search box to search for words within the English translations, by typing !tra
followed by a space and then your search term.
The search engine understands the basics of English morphology so that if, for instance, you search for "king", it will find "king" and related words such as "kings" and "kingly". But it will not find words such as "asking", "speaking" or "waking" which contain the characters "king" but have nothing to do with monarchs.
The search engine will display all relevant paragraphs with your search term highlighted. You can click on the link on the right of each entry to see the word in the context of the entire text. You can sort your finding by period, provenance, and genre using the outline of the left.
You can also search for English words in any of the project's glossaries.
To search within the catalogue data, type !cat
into the search box followed by a space and your search term. Here are some hints for more efficient catalogue
searching:
STT_1_15
finds STT 1, 015)You can restrict your catalogue searches to particular fields, by entering the field name followed by a colon and then what you are searching for, with no space between. Not every project uses the same catalogue fields; see the project's website for more information about these.
designation:CTN_4_117
id_text:p363531
owner:National_Museum_of_Iraq
museum_no:IM_67576
join_information:VAT_7828
genre:medical
subgenre:medical_recipe
language:bilingual
period:Neo-Assyrian
date_of_origin:SE_61
(where SE = Seleucid Era)date_remarks:250_BC
provenience:Kalhu
(note US spelling)findspot:Ue_XVIII_1
excavation_no:ND_4404
Eleanor Robson
Eleanor Robson, 'Searching the Oracc corpora', Oracc: The Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus, Oracc, 2019 [http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/doc/search/searchingcorpora/]