There are a number of cases in which transcriptions show [r] as line-initial in running text. But curiously, when we look closely at each of these cases, they tend to have the flourish which [s] and [r] share in common attached to an unusually formed hatchmark, or else to be anomalous in some other way. I identified the set of examples I'll be reviewing here by searching You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view., and also by looking through the pages myself for anything that looked potentially like a line-initial [r]. If there are other relevant cases I've missed, I'd appreciate someone pointing them out.
On You are not allowed to view links.
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Here a line begins with a reasonably unambiguous [r]. But it also belongs to one of those weird passages in which the main text appears to have drifted inward from the left margin and then had "extra" glyphs added at the beginning of the more deeply indented lines, producing unusual words that start [oqo-] and so forth. For convenience, I'll call this phenomenon an
[oqo] block. (See further discussion You are not allowed to view links.
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On f24r, an [r] seems to appear at the start of a single-vord indented line at the end of the running text:
But notice that the angle of the "line" is much shallower than that of the two "lines" that appear later in the vord. This type of shallow angle appears to be more consistent with "curves" of the [<] type (see my previous post in this thread).
On f54r:
This time the hatchmark appears to be of the ambiguous [L] type (again, see previous post).
On f26r:
The flourish is attached to a longer vertical line more like the one in [q], and not to a typically angled "minim"-type "line" of typical length.
On You are not allowed to view links.
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This time the line is slightly angled, but it's still less angled than most "minim"-type "lines," and it also belongs to another of those mysterious [oqo] blocks.
The most "normal" case of line-initial [r] I was able to find anywhere appears on f85r:
But here too, the "line" is distinctly longer than usual for a "minim"-type "line," so we might group it together with the examples from You are not allowed to view links.
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On f45v:
The flourish is attached (sort of) to a stubby vertical line, yet again very unlike the typical "line"; and it's also conspicuously smaller than the "equivalent" flourish on the following [s].
On f105v:
This is another mostly vertical line, and if it's curved, it's in the "wrong" direction, like the odd line-initial glyphs seen on You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. -- which belong, notably, to yet another of those mysterious [oqo] blocks:
Some further cases of line-initial [r] reported in ZL look ambiguous to my eye -- they could equally well contain "curves" or "lines." For example, You are not allowed to view links.
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-- and You are not allowed to view links.
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On f66r, ZL has [saiir], but this looks to me like a similarly ambiguous case:
What I couldn't find anywhere was an unambiguous and completely ordinary case of line-initial [r] in running text. In every case, I believe at least one of the following conditions pertains:
(1) The line of text belongs to an [oqo] block.
(2) The hatchmark is longer/taller than usual, and/or more vertical than usual, and/or curved in an atypical way (e.g., [<] or [L]).
(3) The [r] could just as plausibly be an [s].