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Jezebel
 
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First, your publisher is *very* unlikely to create the finished book by
photocopying what you supply. Although it's true that a lot of small print
run books (which includes most linguistics texts unless you're a Chomsky
or - god forbid - a Lakoff) are printed by photocopying, the original from
which the photocopy is produced won't simply be a printout of your Word
document.

This is especially true if you create the document using a cruddy font like
Microsoft's Times New Roman. The publisher will likely ask you for the
original Word document, send it on to someone who knows what they're doing,
and leave it to them to fix these format it properly.

That said, the solution is to set your line spacing to an exact amount,
large enough for your phonetic glyphs. Go to Format Style, select
paragraph, and set the line spacing to an exact distance. If you're working
with 11pt text, the auto line spacing will be 13 pt (font size * 120%, to
the nearest half point) -- try increasing this by a point or two. That
should be enough to accommodate the phonetic font you're using. (Did you pay
for this phonetic font, by the way? -- if not, that's probably the cause of
the problem. Free fonts often have lousy metrics.) You'll also need to set
the line-spacing for all the styles that are based on Normal, otherwise
they'll inherit the fixed line spacing.




"Peyton Todd" wrote in message
...
Hello. I expect this will be a tough question to answer.

A little detail first, then I'll get to my question...

I am writing a book in linguistics, and I don't have a publisher yet, but
most tings written in the field tend to be in a font which looks like

Times
New Roman. And I believe lots of publishers nowadays just photocopy what

you
send. So I'm writing the book in Times New Roman.

But I need to include a lot of examples of speech using the International
Phonetic Alphabet. The fonts which come with Word don't have anywhere near
the full set of symbols necessary, but I have found and installed a font
which has everything I need. It's a complicated system involving a program
called KeyMan by Tavelsoft Corp, and virtual 'keyboards', including one

with
IPA symbols in Unicode. (Colleagues have reported getting drafts rejected

by
publishers who didn't have the same plug-in they were using when they

wrote
their book or article.)

Well, the symbols look great, and they're easy to use (different
combinations of keystrokes lead to the desired characters, like typing

Ctrl +
~ and then 'n' to get an n with a tilde over it in Spanish, but a lot

moreso.

But here's my problem. When I stuff some symbols into a line, say as

follows:

asdf asdf asdf asdf xxxx adf asdf asdf afdf

where xxxx is the symbols, the line spacing between that line and the one
before it widens. So all the other lines in the paragraph look fine, both

the
lines before the one I put the symbols in, and the ones below that line,

but
the paragraph looks funny. I can nearly fix this by reducing the fontsize

of
the symbols by a couple of points (e.g. the Times New Roman in 11 pt. and

the
symbols in 9 pt.), but now the symbols look small and silly.

By the way, the symbols are an Arial font. But that's apparently not the
problem. I find it's possible to mix Arial and Times New Roman fonts on a
line without this problem occurring as long as they're all regular

characters.

Any ideas?




everything ihaven't checked with the publisher yet, a linguist, and I need
to write articles
--
Peyton Todd