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Courtney577

: Name of justification style where the rest of verse is aligned differently Found in poems in this justification style words that didn't quite make it onto a line but are still part of a logical

@Courtney577

Posted in: #Terminology #Typography

Found in poems in this justification style words that didn't quite make it onto a line but are still part of a logical line (verse) are put below but aligned differently (aligned to the side where the line ends):


This verse line is too long but the last word still |
belongs. |
Another verse would begin on the left side again. |





What is this justification style called?

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@Odierno310

"Right runt," or "right-aligned runt."

There is a GREP style to prevent runts in left-aligned paragraphs — www.brennenreece.com/blog/fixing-runts-in-indesign-using-grep – but I'm not aware of any method to insert a right-align tab automatically before a runt, which would create the format you wish.

The general idea would be to replace the "whitespace before the runt" with a right-align tab. Easily done manually, but might be time-consuming if your text is long.

One concern would be whether you have any lines in which more than a single word exceeds your line measure (there's not one in your sample image, but there could be elsewhere). In that case, the paradigm would be to replace the "first whitespace beyond the line measure" with a right-align tab.

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@Kaufman565

"Technically" it is "aligned left with last line aligned right." From what I have researched, there is not a more specific name for it. There is a button in InDesign for "justified with last line aligned right." But what you have pictured is ragged right, not justified.

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@Debbie163

In French Poetry, specific case is called a "vers sur-long". Which basically translates as "overlong verse".

As far as I know, the related composition rule has no specific name, but is probably different in every country. For example, in French, "returned" words must be preceded by a opening square bracket. They usually (and obviously) are placed below but can be placed above, if next verse is too long.

If the poem is isometric, hypermetrical and hypercatalectic verses should be composed that way, even if page is large enough, in order to keep the right number of syllables in one line. Again, these are French rules and might be different in your country.

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