Strict Verbatim Guide

Complete guide to strict verbatim transcription requirements.

Strict Verbatim Guide

#

Grammar and Contractions

  • No grammar to be corrected. Contractions can be transcribed as spoken.

#

Stutters

Stutters should be indicated, but not super-accurately, for example:

  • "I work at the, the farm" is fine, rather than "I work at t-t-the, f-farm"
  • If the stutter involves entire words: "the, the dog", then they should be separated by commas: "I, I, I can't find my pen", not by dashes: "the- the dog"
  • If it's letters "t-t-the f-farm" then dashes is fine

#

Verbal Fillers

  • The majority of erms and ers, etc. need to be transcribed
  • Slang words and colloquialisms to be transcribed as spoken
  • Use: Er, Erm, Hmm, Hmmhmm, Aha (Please stick to these examples for consistency)
  • 'Hmmhmm' should be used for affirmative sounds
  • Interjections should be mostly included as spoken

#

Speaker Interjections

Speaker interjections like affirmations or assurances should almost always be transcribed unless very frequent – in which case by necessity a proportion should be left out.

#

Colloquialisms and Slang

  • Colloquialisms like 'gonna', 'dunno', 'ain't', can be transcribed as spoken
  • Make sure if contracted, these are spelled correctly:

  • 'til instead of 'till'
  • 'Cause not cos
  • #

    Regional Dialect

    • Regional dialect is retained, where relevant, e.g. 'cannae', 'bairn'
    • However, mispronounced (due to regional accent, rather than an actual dialect) like 'meself' should be corrected – 'myself'

    #

    General Slang

    General slang like 'yeah' and 'gonna' can be written out as spoken in strict verbatim. In standard format, use your discretion which suits the transcript best.

    #

    Key Principle

    Transcribe exactly as spoken with minimal editing for readability.

    Other Verbatim Styles Guidelines