So taking another approach to try to find non-Bible but Bible-related texts with morphology ... of course I find another problem ..
Basic approach run a search, open some of the first resources that you can navigate to without going crazy. Naturally things go crazy:
Orthodox Bishop Hilarion Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."
MJ. Smith:So taking another approach to try to find non-Bible but Bible-related texts with morphology
In your other thread, I recommended Morph Search to identify these resources. But you can use a filter in Morph Search to identify non-bibles:
From there, you can run a Search on <LogosMorphGr ~ J????>, <LogosMorphHeb ~ N?????>, <ArcInsMorph ~ N????+S???G?>, <SemInsMorph ~ N????+S???G?>, which got results for all my non-bibles. Then you can open them and add to a bibliography.
For (the few) missing resources, open them individually and add to Bibliography. Or find their morphology (from Morph Search), run a Search and then open them.
Dave===
Windows 10 & Android 8
Thanks again for your help with the search - I often think there must be a way to do it but lack the facility to see the path.
Bump initial problem of resource title not yet addressed.
At this time we're not able to support searching within your library for bibliographic citation data (i.e. screenshot #4).
This particular resource/project is an interesting one. It comes from the Perseus project which was a special project on our part that pulled files from a website to produce both resource and metadata. Because of the way Perseus kept their files they split up print books (i.e. the citation data) into individual resources (e.g. De Spectaculis). Because of the special nature of this project it is unlikely that we will be able to go back and tweak the metadata for all the titles in the project.