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It is worth noting the extent to which previous investigators dealing with Compositor B in the Folio and working without the ability to distinguish E from B as well as without reference to copy have determined B's preferential spellings as they are revealed in the Paviers. Four of the five test words proposed by Willoughby as means of identifying B are in fact strong B preferences.[21] Twenty-one of the forms proposed by Alice Walker as characteristic B spellings have been studied in the Paviers, and seventeen of the twenty-one are strong preferential spellings there. Two conclusions can be drawn from these results. First, the limited amount of text set by E and the closeness of his overall spelling pattern to that of B have not obscured B's spellings from previous investigators. Second, the fact that seventeen of B's Folio habits are confirmed in the Paviers indicates the extent to which set habits remained fixed. Although it will be necessary for later investigations to analyze B's Folio spellings fully, the preliminary indications are that the Paviers give an excellent idea of B's spellings. This is not to say, however, that any one individual B spelling as observed in the Paviers can be assumed to be his fixed preferential spelling. The general texture of B's spellings in the Paviers, however, should be reflected in his work in the Folio.
It is also important to note that the various words here discussed display all of the various logical possibilities for a compositor's treatment of variant spellings. B is seen to display strong preferences for one, two, and even three variant spellings of given words and can display indifference which appears neither to be influenced by a weak preference nor to depend on copy forms.
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