<factuality>
| <factuality> describes the extent to which the text may be regarded as imaginative or non-imaginative, that is, as describing a fictional or a non-fictional world. 15.2.1 The Text Description | |||||||
| Module | corpus — 15 Language Corpora | ||||||
| In addition to global attributes | In addition to global attributes 
 | ||||||
| Used by | |||||||
| May contain | core: abbr address cb choice date distinct email emph expan foreign gap gloss index lb measure measureGrp mentioned milestone name note num pb ptr ref rs soCalled term time title  dictionaries: lang  figures: figure  header: idno  msdescription: catchwords depth dim dimensions height heraldry locus locusGrp material origDate origPlace secFol signatures stamp watermark width  namesdates: addName affiliation bloc country district forename genName geo geogFeat geogName nameLink offset orgName persName placeName region roleName settlement state surname  textcrit: witDetail  | ||||||
| Declaration | 
 element factuality { att.global.attributes, attribute type { "fiction" | "fact" | "mixed" | "inapplicable" }?, macro.phraseSeq.limited } | ||||||
| Example | <factuality type="fiction"/>
                        
                      | ||||||
| Example | <factuality type="mixed">contains a mixture of gossip and speculation about real people and events</factuality> | ||||||
| Note | 
                           Usually empty, unless some further clarification of the type
                        attribute is needed, in which case it may contain running prose
                      
                           For many literary texts, a simple binary opposition between
                        ‘fiction’
                        and ‘fact’ is naïve in the extreme; this parameter is not intended
                        for purposes of subtle literary analysis, but as a simple means of
                        characterising the claimed fictiveness of a given text. No claim is made
                        that works characterised as ‘fact’ are in  any sense ‘true’.
                      | ||||||
