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An orphan is where a new paragraph begins with a single line of text at the foot of the page or column (a mnemonic for remembering which is which is that a widow is old, and appears at the end of a paragraph, and an orphan is young, appearing at the start). A widow appears when a paragraph ends with a single line of text at the head of the following page or column. These are short passages at the start or end of a paragraph that have become separated from the main body of text.
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Widow and orphan are two other terms that refer to the way text is positioned on the page. For example, when typing in Microsoft Word, your keyboard has the facility to create em and en dashes, yet these characters have been in use since the 1700s. We may live in the computerised age, where manipulating text is as easy as, well, abc, but some of the terms we use have been with us for hundreds of years. One of the first things a new desk top publishing student learns is the layout of a page and the rich terminology that goes with it. Yet while the physical effort may have been removed from typing, the origin of many features of word processing that are still currently in use can be traced back to the early days of printing. These days we take it for granted that Word will automatically move the cursor onto the next line as we type, so spare a thought for typists of yore, who had to push their carriages back hundreds of times a day. On a manual typewriter, for those who have never used one, each time the text approached the end of a line, a bell would ping to alert the typist, who would then physically push the entire carriage back to its starting position.
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This highlighted one of the great advantages that the word processor has over its manual predecessor: flowing text. I recently watched a re-run of the 1970s American sitcom, The Odd Couple, in which Oscar, the untidy sports writer, was typing his newspaper column on an old manual typewriter (while in bed).
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