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#1
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How do I link 2 words so they will always be on the same line?
I'm working with a very large document (400+ pages) and need to make sure
some word combinations stay on the same line of text. For example "(p. 384)" as a citation needs to stay together even if spacing changes so that "(p. " would fit at the end of one line and "384)" begins the next. I don't want to add extra spaces that could later end up being in the middle of the line. |
#2
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Hi
Insert Symbol. On the Special Characters tab, choose Nonbreaking space. Or, use the built-in shortcut: ctrl-Shift-spacebar. Hope this helps. Shauna Kelly. Microsoft MVP. http://www.shaunakelly.com/word "drmjm" wrote in message ... I'm working with a very large document (400+ pages) and need to make sure some word combinations stay on the same line of text. For example "(p. 384)" as a citation needs to stay together even if spacing changes so that "(p. " would fit at the end of one line and "384)" begins the next. I don't want to add extra spaces that could later end up being in the middle of the line. |
#3
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On Sat, 7 May 2005 07:09:01 -0700, "drmjm"
wrote: I'm working with a very large document (400+ pages) and need to make sure some word combinations stay on the same line of text. For example "(p. 384)" as a citation needs to stay together even if spacing changes so that "(p. " would fit at the end of one line and "384)" begins the next. I don't want to add extra spaces that could later end up being in the middle of the line. Press Ctrl+Shift+spacebar to insert a nonbreaking space. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org |
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