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<font face="FreeSerif">$ diatheke -b KJV <b>-o l</b> -f xhtml -k
rom.1.1<br>
[ ... ] Romans 1:1: <span style="font:"Gentium;" >Paul, a
servant of Jesus Christ, called <span class="transChange
transChange-added">to be</span> an apostle, separated
unto the gospel of God,</span><br /><br>
(KJV)<br>
<br>
No lemma content provided. By comparison, combined with Strong's:<br>
<br>
$ diatheke -b KJV <b>-o nl</b> -f xhtml -k rom.1.1<br>
[ ... ] Romans 1:1: <span style="font:"Gentium;"
>Paul<small><em class="strongs">&lt;<a
href="passagestudy.jsp?action=showStrongs&type=Greek&value=3972"
class="strongs">3972</a>&gt;</em></small><b><small><em
class="strongs">&lt;<a
href="passagestudy.jsp?action=showStrongs&type=&value=%CF%80%CE%B1%CF%85%CE%BB%CE%BF%CF%82"
class="strongs">παυλος</a>&gt;</em></small></b>,
[ ... ]<br>
<br>
No lemmas unless Strong's is also enabled. This is a regression
in the shift from HTML to XHTML filters, because<br>
<br>
$ diatheke -b KJV <b>-o l -f html</b> -k rom.1.1<br>
<br>
includes e.g.<br>
<br>
<w savlm="strong:G3972 lemma.TR:παυλος"
src="1">Paul</w></font><br>
<br>
While I'm at it, note unmatched double-quote in <font
face="FreeSerif"><span style=<b>"font:"Gentium;"</b> ></font>
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