Indeed, that works but it puts the characters *into the line whereas I think
what is wanted is something meta, which should therefore be put above the
line
L
-------------------------------
JUST PUBLISHED:
"huming / queuing" by Lawrence Upton
Writers Forum, London; November 1999
40 pp; ISBN 0 86162 £3.00 sterling plus p & p
----- Original Message -----
From: Mills, Billy <[log in to unmask]>
To: British (E-mail) <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: 07 December 1999 16:41
Subject: RE: Stress patterns
| Try Ctrl + Apostrophe + the letter all at the same time. If you look in
Help
| index and contents under symbols - Inserting - Insert symbols or special
| characters - Type international characters you'll find instructions for
all
| kinds of things.
|
| Billy
|
| -----Original Message-----
| From: John Kearns [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
| Sent: Tuesday, December 07, 1999 4:13 PM
| To: [log in to unmask]
| Subject: Stress patterns
|
|
| Hi all,
|
| Apologies in advance if this is too mundane but I was wondering if anyone
| can tell me how I can indicate stress patterns in lines of poetry using
Word
| 7. I'm not talking about anything complicated - just grave accents (or
| dashes) for stresses and u-shapes for unstressed syllables, all in
| superscript. Either I'm a Luddite or just too darn dim but I get the
hunch,
| after trying to figure this out for quite a while, that it's something the
| good people at Microsoft just haven't considered.
|
| Best wishes,
|
| John Kearns
|
|
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