Data dikumpulkan dengan membaca lirik dalam bahasa Batak Toba, menerjemahkan ke dalam bahasa Inggris, dan menganalisis nilai-nilai dalam setiap lagu berdasarkan esensi terjemahan, budaya, dan pesan. Penelitian ini membahas pendekatan kualitatif yang difokuskan pada chorus atau referen dari setiap lagu. Meski bertahan lama di kota, ikatan antara mereka dengan orang tua di kampung halaman terjalin kuat dan terlihat dalam bentuk karya sastra anak perantauan berupa lagu. Mereka yang datang ke kota sering ingin kuliah dan bekerja. Disebut laki-laki Batak, khusus dari Batak Toba di Jakarta atau kota-kota besar di Indonesia adalah perantau yang berasal dari daerah Toba Samosir. Tujuh lagu yang dianalisis cukup populer di kota-kota besar di Indonesia, malah dibawakan dalam bahasa daerah. Now I just have to search for or or or or or or and when nothing comes up, I’ll call the draft done.Abstrak Penelitian ini bertujuan menganalisis nilai-nilai tujuh lagu daerah Batak Toba yang diajukan oleh laki-laki Batak Toba kepada orang tuanya. It doesn’t have to be, because it’s so short–the real to dos are in the outline itself. I can also hide all the notes if I just want to see the actual scenes.Īt the top of my outline file, I have a to do list, which looks just like a normal to do list and isn’t color coded at all. That makes it super easy to find all the scenes I have to write, or outline, or revise–which is very helpful since I’m skipping around so much and it’d be easy to miss something. Note that I can click on any tag, and TaskPaper runs a search for that tag. So this means I have an outline that looks sort of like this, except a whole lot longer (and with more notes). I like colors.Īnd no, I can’t quantify the difference between the “majorchanges,” “changes,” and “revise” tags. Yes, I have a “priority” tag and an “emph” (for emphasis) tag, just in case I need to emphasize things that aren’t priorities. Yes, it’s sort of rainbow-ordered in the order that I would tend to label scenes as. I’ve also got tags for point of view character, but right now I’m not using them much. Here’s my tagging scheme, which is designed to help me figure out what’s left to do. So I’ve got this theme file that color codes scenes by status. You can also create more than one theme file and switch between them–so if sometimes you want to color code by location, and sometimes by point of view, and sometimes by status, you can do that. What TaskPaper has is any tags you want, which means you can create any tagging scheme, and you can create a theme file to color code it any way you like. It has plenty–it has label and status and keywords and user-created fields–but they don’t all behave in the same way. The real reason I’m not using it, though, is because it doesn’t have all the tagging functionality that TaskPaper has. But it’s not on iOS yet, and it’s not completely text based, which makes it a bit more tricky to change things quickly. Let me begin by reaffirming my love of Scrivener, which has an outline mode and can do everything that I’m doing with TaskPaper. (It’s Mac only, so if that doesn’t interest you, you can skip this post now.) Last week I mentioned TaskPaper and said that this week I would say more about how I use it as an outliner.
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