speakable
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech. The *speakable* property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values: 1.) *id-value* URL references - uses *id-value* of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of *speakable* has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned. 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the [[cssSelector]] property. 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the [[xpath]] property. For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, [[SpeakableSpecification]] which is defined to be a possible value of the *speakable* property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech. The *speakable* property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values: 1.) *id-value* URL references - uses *id-value* of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of *speakable* has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned. 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the [[cssSelector]] property. 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the [[xpath]] property. For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, [[SpeakableSpecification]] which is defined to be a possible value of the *speakable* property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech. The *speakable* property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values: 1.) *id-value* URL references - uses *id-value* of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of *speakable* has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned. 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, e.g. via class attribute. Use the [[cssSelector]] property. 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the [[xpath]] property. For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, [[SpeakableSpecification]] which is defined to be a possible value of the *speakable* property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech. The *speakable* property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values: 1.) *id-value* URL references - uses *id-value* of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of *speakable* has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned. 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, e.g. via class attribute. Use the [[cssSelector]] property. 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the [[xpath]] property. For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, [[SpeakableSpecification]] which is defined to be a possible value of the *speakable* property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech. The *speakable* property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values: 1.) *id-value* URL references - uses *id-value* of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of *speakable* has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned. 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the [[cssSelector]] property. 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the [[xpath]] property. For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, [[SpeakableSpecification]] which is defined to be a possible value of the *speakable* property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech. The *speakable* property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values: 1.) *id-value* URL references - uses *id-value* of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of *speakable* has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned. 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the [[cssSelector]] property. 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the [[xpath]] property. For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, [[SpeakableSpecification]] which is defined to be a possible value of the *speakable* property.
"""
Note: This release changed to HTTPS IRIs. Those changes are suppressed since schemaorg-coda normalizes to HTTPS.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="https://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.</p> <p>The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:</p> <p>1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.</p> <p>2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.</p> <p>3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.</p> <p>For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.</p> <p>The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:</p> <p>1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.</p> <p>2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.</p> <p>3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.</p> <p>For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.<br/><br/> The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:<br/><br/> 1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.<br/><br/> 2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.<br/><br/> 3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.<br/><br/> For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.</p> <p>The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:</p> <p>1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.</p> <p>2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.</p> <p>3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.</p> <p>For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.</p> <p>The <em>speakable</em> property can be repeated an arbitrary number of times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:</p> <p>1.) <em>id-value</em> URL references - uses <em>id-value</em> of an element in the page being annotated. The simplest use of <em>speakable</em> has (potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the document concerned.</p> <p>2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/cssSelector">cssSelector</a> property.</p> <p>3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the content). Use the <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/xpath">xpath</a> property.</p> <p>For more sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references, either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s) as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, <a class="localLink" href="http://schema.org/SpeakableSpecification">SpeakableSpecification</a> which is defined to be a possible value of the <em>speakable</em> property.
"""
"""
speakable
"""
speakable
"""