Hyphenation Poem by bob crackhead

Hyphenation



There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic. There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization. The Paragraph as Information Technology: How News Traveled in the Eighteenth-Century
Atlantic World
My paper will provide a brief but important chapter in the history of the paragraph.
Specialists of the printed book like Henri-Jean Martin and Roger Laufer have argued that the
use of paragraph breaks became more and more common in the late 17th and early 18th
centuries and they have explored how the fragmentation of texts transformed royal
proclamations, law codes, philosophical treatises, and of course novels. Yet the news, which
was bursting into print at the same time, was also transformed by the paragraph. And it was in
the columns of the 18th-century newspaper that the paragraph took on a new political
significance, becoming a distinct genre of publicity and an expedient vehicle for transmitting
messages abroad.
Every eighteenth-century newspaper was composed of other newspapers, and the news they
contained depended upon the patterns of communication between them. Printers, editors and
readers referred to “paragraphs” to distinguish textual objects that were “copied from” or
“inserted in” such and such a newspaper. They mocked “paragraph writers” working to
advance various political and financial interests. In the printing shop, composing the
newspaper became a game of paragraphs: one had to select, modify and rearrange content
from a range of sources to fill the available space. The paragraph had strayed far from the
Scholastic world in which the “paragraphus” indicated the next proposition in a chain of
argumentation. In liberating the paragraph from what preceded it and from what followed it,
18th-century journalism established a new regime of politicized writing. A paragraph written
in Boston could have a strange afterlife in London, Amsterdam and Madrid.
My claim is that the paragraph was the essential information technology that made
international news possible before the telegraph, CNN or the Internet. The phenomenon was
not limited to the English-language world because gazettes in French, Dutch, German, Italian
and Spanish all translated heavily from the London press, which John Adams described as “an
engine by which everything is scattered all over the world.” But interdependence did not
mean uniformity. Therefore, my presentation will include a detailed reconstruction of how a
particular news story evolved as it traveled from North America to Britain and from there to
France and beyond.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.There are three indent options: left, first, and right. Right indentation is fairly self explanatory, but it is important to be aware of the difference between left and first. It's important to note that if you put in the same value for First and Left indentation, the first line of the paragraph will be indented double the value, as both functions are applied at the same time. First affects only the first line of a paragraph (a paragraph is defined as a block of text offset by carriage returns, which are inserted when you press the key) . Left, on the other hand, affects the entire paragraph.

You may also insert preset spaces or ruler lines above or below each paragraph. This is especially helpful for defining the amount of white space that is to surround text, as carriage returns merely insert the amount space defined by the current font. As you may realize, fonts each have their own specifications, so having a ruler length of space defined is helpful if several fonts are being used. Rule lines can be inserted by clicking the Rules... button, after which you can choose the line style, color, and indent. Ruler length may also be set in the Options dialog.

HYPHENATION
The issue of hyphenation is a tricky one. Some people prefer to never see words hyphenated, while others prefer to avoid the whitespace often caused by not using hyphens. It's always a good idea to investigate the hyphenation styles preferred by your department or work organization.

To change hyphenation settings for your document, go to the Hyphenation dialog accessible through the arrow menu on the Paragraph palette. You may choose to fully turn off hyphenation or use it only under certain circumstances. Remember, however, that grammatical rules always have exceptions, so expecting InDesign to always perfectly hyphenate is unrealistic.

POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This is for jordan sampson the titty nun
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
William Punter 06 November 2013

I think you've made some sort of mistake here, the poem seems to repeat.? : /

0 0 Reply
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