[DCRM-L] [External] Re: Transcription of German superscript "o"

Lewis, Dylan dylan.lewis at emory.edu
Thu Dec 4 11:46:07 MST 2025


Hi all,

I do not have a solution for OCLC because I've found it difficult to work with when using less common diacritics, so I am eagerly following this conversation.

I would, however, suggest that the u be represented with a superscript Roman o instead of rendering it as an umlaut, as Karen suggested. It would take a bit of research to truly determine if an umlaut's function was meant there, as a u with a superscript o can mean several things in sixteenth-century German (some dialects used it as a graphematic distinction between u and n, other dialects used it to signal a /uo/ diphthong separate from /ue/). I think it's actually more likely it was not intended to be read as an umlaut, so we should not assume it was meant to be one.

Please do let me know if a solution is found regarding the superscript character not in OCLC's menu!
Best,
Dylan

❡ Dylan Lewis (he/him<https://pronouns.org/he-him>)
Rare Book Librarian
Andrew W. Mellon Junior Fellow in Critical Bibliography
Stuart A. Rose Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Book Library
Emory University
Libraries.emory.edu/rose<http://libraries.emory.edu/rose>

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________________________________
From: DCRM-L <dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu> on behalf of Karen Attar via DCRM-L <dcrm-l at lib.byu.edu>
Sent: Thursday, December 4, 2025 12:00 PM
To: DCRM Users' Group <dcrm-l at lib.byu.edu>
Cc: Karen Attar <karen.attar at london.ac.uk>
Subject: [External] Re: [DCRM-L] Transcription of German superscript "o"


Hi Calli,



The superscript “o” is clearly meant to function as an umlaut. It’s interesting that there’s a letter u with a superscript character above it in the place of an umlaut in one instance, though mostly u has a regular umlaut above it where required.



We are moving in the direction of transcribing letters as they are meant to be (e.g. vv where there is a slight space between the two letters v is now transcribed as w). Under those circumstances, lacking technical power to transcribe the superscript o, if I were in this dilemma I would transcribe as ö, and add a note about how the umlauts are represented on the title page.



I do not actually enter things on OCLC, so if somebody from the US answers your email, follow what they say, not what I say.



Best wishes,
Karen



Dr Karen Attar

Curator of Rare Books and University Art

Senate House Library, University of London

Senate House

Malet St

London WC1E 7HU

Tel. 020 7862 8472



https://research.london.ac.uk/search/fellow/516/dr-karen-attar/







From: DCRM-L <dcrm-l-bounces at lib.byu.edu> On Behalf Of Calli Neumann via DCRM-L
Sent: 04 December 2025 16:18
To: dcrm-l at lib.byu.edu
Cc: Calli Neumann <CNeumann at getty.edu>
Subject: [DCRM-L] Transcription of German superscript "o"



Hello,



I'm cataloging disbound leaves of a German book from 1556, which is digitized here<https://www.google.com/books/edition/New_gro%C3%9F_distillier_Buch_wolgegr%C3%BCndter/-nhVAAAAcAAJ?hl=en> <https://www.google.com/books/edition/New_gro%C3%9F_distillier_Buch_wolgegr%C3%BCndter/-nhVAAAAcAAJ?hl=en> in Google Books.



My question is about the superscript "o" in "Buch" in the title.  The example in the table of Early Letterforms & Symbols shows that the letter should be transcribed with the superscript character ("můss").  The same example also appears in a wonderful post from the Folger here<https://www.folger.edu/blogs/collation/brevigraphs/>: "In German ... it really is a superscript o, a medieval superscript letter diacritic."  There is a footnote that says this should not confused with the ring diacritic ("overring"), and that "Combining Latin Small Letter o" is Unicode U+0366.



Assuming I'm on the right track, how should this be entered in OCLC?  There is only a ring in the diacritics and special characters menu.  Unsure whether I can copy & paste a "u" with the Unicode character indicated above, and it does not look right pasted in Connexion.



Thank you!



Calli



Calli Neumann
Cataloging Librarian
Getty Research Institute
(310) 440 7499  |  getty.edu<http://www.getty.edu/>

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