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Widows and orphans

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An illustration of a widowed line, highlighted in yellow, appearing at the top of a page.

In typesetting, widows and orphans are words or short lines at the beginning or end of a paragraph, which are left dangling at the top or bottom of a column, separated from the rest of the paragraph. There is some disagreement about the definitions of widow and orphan; what one source calls a widow the other calls an orphan[1][2]. The Chicago Manual of Style uses these definitions[3]:

Widow

  • A paragraph-ending line that falls at the beginning of the following page/column, thus separated from the remainder of the text.

Orphan

  • A paragraph-opening line that appears by itself at the bottom of a page/column.
  • A word, part of a word or very short line that appears by itself at the end of a paragraph. Orphans result in too much white space between paragraphs or at the bottom of a page.

Contents

[edit] Examples

Widow end of paragraph at the top of a page:

Page 1 Page 2
xxxxx xxx xxxxx. Xxx x xxxxxx xxx a widowed line.
xxxx xx xxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx, xxx xx
xxxxx, x xxxx xxxxxxxx xxx xxxxxx. Xxx xxxx xx xxxxx x xxxxx xxxxx xx x
Xxxx xx xx xxxx xxxx xxxxxxx xx xx xxxxx, x xxxx xxxxx. Xxxx xxxxxx xxx


Orphaned word ending a paragraph:

Page
This is a sentence with a some filler nonsense words in the
middle ending with a very, very, very excellent example of an
orphan.


Orphan line of paragraph at the bottom of a page:

Page 1 Page 2
xx xxxxxxxxx xx xxxx xxx. Xxx xxxx xxxx, xxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxx xxx
xxxxx xx xxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxxx, xxx xxxxxxxxx xx x xxxx xxxxx xx xxxxx.
xx xxxxxx xx xxxxxxx xxxx xx xxxxx. Xxx xxx xx xxxxx x xxxxx xxxxx xx x
xxxx xx. Xxxxx xx xxxxxxxx, xxx xx.
An orphan line xx x xxxxx, xxxxxxx xxxxx, x xxxx xxxxx, xxxx xxxxx xxx

[edit] Remembering the terms

A common mnemonic is that "an orphan has no past; a widow has no future".[4]

Another way is to think of orphans as generally being younger than widows; thus, orphaned lines happen first, at the start of paragraphs (affecting and stranding the first line), and widowed lines happen last, at the end of paragraphs (affecting and stranding the last line). Orphaned lines appear at the "birth" (start) of paragraphs; widowed lines appear at the "death" (end) of paragraphs.

[edit] Guidelines

Writing guides generally suggest that a manuscript should have no widows and orphans[5][citation needed] even when avoiding them results in additional space at the bottom of a page or column. Some techniques for eliminating widows include:

  • Forcing a page break early, producing a shorter page;
  • Adjusting the leading, the space between lines of text (although such carding or feathering is usually frowned upon);
  • Adjusting the spacing between words to produce 'tighter' or 'looser' paragraphs;
  • Adjusting the hyphenation of words within the paragraph;
  • Adjusting the page's margins;
  • Subtle scaling of the page, though too much non-uniform scaling can visibly distort the letters;
  • Rewriting a portion of the paragraph;
  • Reduce the tracking of the words;
  • Adding a pull quote to the text (more common for magazines); and
  • Adding a figure to the text, or resizing an existing figure.

An orphan is cured more easily, by inserting a blank line or forcing a page break to push the orphan line onto the next page to be with the rest of its paragraph. Such a cure may have to be undone if editing the text repositions the automatic page/column break.

Most full-featured word processors and page layout applications include a paragraph setting (or option) to automatically prevent widows and orphans. When the option is turned on, an orphan is forced to the top of the next page or column; and the line preceding a widow is forced to the next page or column with the last line. This automatic adjustment to a page's layout can be a source of frustration for someone who is unaware of why text is shifted from one page to the next.


[edit] References

  1. ^ Carter, Rob. Day, Ben. Meggs, Philip. Typographic Design: Form and Communication 2nd ed. John Wiley & Sons: 1993. p. 263
  2. ^ "Chicago Manual of Style" http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/appA_KeyTerms.html#app01-widow
  3. ^ "Chicago Manual of Style" http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/appA_KeyTerms.html#app01-widow
  4. ^ Bringhurst, Robert. The Elements of Typographic Style. 3rd ed. Hartley and Marks Publishers: 2004. pp. 43-44 ISBN 0881792063
  5. ^ http://www.fhs.usyd.edu.au/pdfs_docs/fitzgerald_writing_gd.pdf, page 6[dubious ]
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