Serial MFHD/Item Record: Punctuation and data recording examples

1.  Punctuation Conventions

The hyphen is used to indicate an unbroken range of holdings. 

v.1(1953)-v.5(1957) 

The comma is used to indicate a gap in a range of holdings. 

1942-1945, 
1953-1955 

The diagonal is used as a connector between notations that form a single entity, such as two different years that form a single period of coverage or a double volume number. 

v.1/5(1960/1965) 

The question mark is used as the last digit of the date to show an unknown quantity in a date. 

1950-197? 

The colon is used as a delimiter between a first-order designator and its related subsequent-order designators. 

v.1:no.1:pt.1 

The semicolon is used to indicate a nongap break in a range of holdings, i.e., when an item is not published or a change in numbering occurs. 

v.1-4;v.6 

The space is used in chronology data to separate a month from a day if the month is not abbreviated. 

(1988:June 12) 

Parentheses are used to separate enumeration data from chronology data. 

v.1(1950) 

The equals sign is used in enumeration data to separate alternative numbering schemes. 

v.2:no.5=no.11 

Brackets are used in chronology data to enclose a supplied date, such as a translated Gregorian date. 

Showa 56-nendo [1981/1982] 

2.  Recording Enumeration Data

All numeric information is converted to Arabic numbers. 

v.VII is recorded as v.7 
First ed. is recorded as 1st ed. 
no. Five is recorded as no.5 
Troisieme is recorded as 3e

For alphabetic data, uppercase and lowercase characters are recorded as they appear on the publication and romanized, if necessary. 

no.36B 
v.B 

Captions associated with enumeration are recorded in the vernacular form appearing on the publication and romanized, if necessary. Captions are abbreviated according to the appropriate portions of Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (Second edition 1988 revision) Appendix B. 

volume 5 is recorded as v.5 
tome 7 is recorded as t.7 
nmbr 3 is recorded as no.3 

When a serial carries combined numbering, for example, as in a double volume, the numbers are separated by a diagonal. 

v.1/2 

Enumeration data is recorded from highest hierarchical level to lowest; the colon is used to separate each level. 

v.1:no.1 
v.1:no.1:pt.A 

When a serial carries multiple schemes of enumeration, the following guidelines apply: 

For unnumbered series, the series caption (e.g., "ns" or "new series") is treated as a caption for the most inclusive level of enumeration data and is recorded at the appropriate location within the enumeration data. 

new ser. v.1 

For numbered series, the series numbering schemes and series captions are treated as the most inclusive level of enumeration data and are recorded in the appropriate location within the enumeration data. 
 

ser.1:v.1:no.1 

For alternative numbering schemes, if there is a scheme of continuously incrementing issue numbers or other numbering schemes in addition to a regular scheme of enumeration, the alternative numbering scheme or schemes is also recorded, following the regular scheme of enumeration and separated by an equals sign. 

v.3:no.1=no.50 

If a serial does not carry enumeration, it is not supplied. 

3.  Recording Chronology Data

The holdings record incorporates all levels of chronology data (e.g., year, month, day) that are recorded consistently on the card. 

When more than one type of date is recorded, a single date is selected from the following preferred dates, in the order indicated: 

Date of coverage 
Date of publication 
Date of copyright 
Date of printing 

The date of reprinting is not used in the holdings record because the chronology information used is that associated with the original work. Reprint information is properly a part of the bibliographic description of the work. 

The format for the year includes all four digits. 

If the century or decade is not known, the year is not recorded. 

Months, seasons, and days are recorded in the vernacular form appearing on the publication and romanized, if necessary. Chronology data is abbreviated according to the appropriate portions of Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules (Second edition 1988 revision) Appendix B. Day notations are not treated as a separate hierarchical level. 

Correct:  1968:June 12 
Incorrect: 1968:June:12 

Chronology data is recorded from highest hierarchical level to lowest; the colon is used to separate each level. 

1980:Jan. 

If a serial does not carry chronology data, it is not supplied. 

If a serial normally carries chronology data, and such data is omitted from a specific piece, it may be supplied within brackets. 

4.  Recording Supplementary Material

A supplement with an independent numbering scheme is considered a separate serial and described in a separate bibliographic record. 

A supplement that is not described in a separate bibliographic record and not contained within a basic bibliographic unit (i.e., one of the segments of the publication sequence of a serial as designated by the publisher) is recorded in the holdings record in field 867

866/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.1(1900)-v.12(1912), 
866/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.14(1914), 
866/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.18(1918)-v.24(1924) 
867/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.14:suppl.

For supplements with independent numbering schemes, the numbering scheme of the supplement is recorded in the holdings record. 

867/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a suppl.A

For supplements with numbering related to a particular volume or issue of the parent serial, all hierarchical levels of the enumeration and chronology data appearing on the publication are recorded in the holdings record. 

867/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.18:suppl.1(1918:June 1)

For supplements that lack an independent numbering scheme or do not have numbering related to a particular volume or issue of the parent serial, one of the following is recorded as appropriate: 

867/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a unnumbered supplement  
867/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a unnumbered supplements 

5.  Recording Indexes

An index with an independent numbering scheme is considered a separate serial and described in a separate bibliographic record. 

An index that is not described in a separate bibliographic record but contained within a basic bibliographic unit (i.e., one of the segments of the publication sequence of a serial as designated by the publisher) is not recorded in the holdings record.  The existence of such an index is usually noted in the bibliographic record. 

An index that is not described in a separate bibliographic record and not contained within a basic bibliographic unit is recorded in the holdings record in field 868. 

866/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.1(1900)-v.12(1912), 
866/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.14(1914), 
866/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.18(1918)-v.24(1924) 
868/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.1/12(1900/1912)  
868/1:41: ‡8 0 ‡a v.13/24(1913/1924)

An index covering a single volume is usually bound with the volume indexed and not recorded in the volume holdings record.