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TAGS: - Abbreviations; - Bibliography; - Chronology and timelines; - Cross-reference; Excel files
Abstract:
List of the standard abbreviations of all published Sacred Writings and other canonical Bahá'í texts, combined with the bibliography from the Basic Bahá'í Chronology.
Notes:
No formal list of abbreviations exists, but such a list can be derived from abbreviations used by the Bahá'í World Centre. First, a partial list is in Messages from the Universal House of Justice 1963-86. Second, the BWC downloads site had a list of their filename abbreviations. Third, Cameron compiled an extensive bibliography for his Chronology. These have been combined, below. See also browser shortcuts, below. See also Glossary of Arabic and Persian Transcription.

Abbreviations of the Bahá'í Writings

Glenn Cameron, compiler
Brett Zamir, compiler

1996/2021

1. Bibliography

The bibliography is online in two formats: a Google spreadsheet
for online viewing, or an Excel document for downloading:

2. Browser Shortcuts

Note: There is now a tutorial video available.

Uses of these shortcuts include being used for using specially enabled features of web browsers (or other applications) to allow the user to type a shortcut representing a specific book followed by a string (such as a page or paragraph number or search item) and then be brought to that page or paragraph of the book (or to a set of search results within that item), in most cases to a page of the Sacred Writings here at Bahá'í Library Online.

For example, you might type control-L (or command-L) to be brought to your browser's URL window, then type a shortcut (say, "gwb" for the book Gleanings) followed by a space and a page number (say, "52"), and the program would bring you to bahai-library.com/writings/bahaullah/gwb/gleaningsall.html#52 , or in other words, to page 52 of Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá'u'lláh here at Bahá'í Library Online

In addition to the abbreviations above, adding the letter "p" to the shortcuts will usually bring one to a paragraph number for the text, if paragraphs exist in the document in question (e.g., "kap" could be used for "Kitáb-i-Aqdas paragraph"). In a few cases, "s" is used similarly to denote a section (e.g., "gwbs" for a section number of Gleanings).

If you prefer to get quickly to the Writings from menus rather than having to remember shortcuts, you might be interested in using Jump-to-page site which has a menu of all of the Sacred Writings, and then one simply needs to type a page (or paragraph or section) number and hit return to go to it directly.

RSS might also be of interest to power users.

Browser-specific instructions

For Chrome, follow the steps here. (There is also an extension which may offer more features, but it requires you to add the individual search engines manually.)

Firefox/Mozilla provides this functionality through Smart Keywords (formerly "Custom Keywords"). You can:

  1. Download a set of our pre-made shortcuts for a bookmarks file here.
  2. Save the file
  3. Go to Firefox's Bookmarks Manager (i.e., "Manage Bookmarks...")
  4. Choose "import" from the menu.
  5. Choose the option to import from a file, and select the bookmarks file saved on your hard-drive.
You should then be able to use the shortcuts provided. You can find out what the shortcuts are by looking either at the Bookmarks properties, or by finding the bookmarks in the Bookmarks Manager and having "keywords" selected to appear in your view of the Bookmarks Manager columns. The keywords are listed here and are mostly intuitive, however, so you will probably not need to consult them often. Just remember to separate the keyword and search term (or page number) with a space.

Some Firefox add-ons are also available:

  • Second Search makes your keyword-based search engines available under the addon's icon.
  • Context Search allows you to add custom keywords through its interface such that you can right-click text on a page to send it to a custom keyword search.
Macintosh only

While I have not used these myself, it appears there are a few extensions you could use to get this functionality for Firefox:

Some search engines, like DuckDuckGo themselves allow "bang" shortcuts which include some predefined searches, but in this case, any new shortcuts apply site-wide and require the search engine's approval.

3. Wiki Shortcuts

Our wiki site has added these abbreviations to our "interwiki" list, so that it is possible for one to use the shortcuts in place of URL's within the wiki code. For example, to link to page 15 of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, one simply needs to type [[ka:15|]] into the wiki edit window (the double-brackets make a link and the pipe symbol after the number is shorthand for saying that the text preceding the pipe but after the colon is what should appear as the face of the link).

4. bahaiwritings web-protocol

See our Test page for how shortcuts are used within the bahaiwritings: web protocol (for linking to the Writings without committing to using a particular app or site).

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VIEWS31151 views since posted 2005-03-10; last edit 2024-05-21 02:05 UTC;
previous at archive.org.../abbreviations_bahai_writings;
URLs changed in 2010, see archive.org.../bahai-library.org
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