> Thanks. I will try this and uncomment the \setotherlanguage{Sanskrit}. That > way if there are any hyphenations in the Hindi verse, they will occur > correctly. Am I correct in thinking this?
You've got it mostly right. I was going to write a detailed and intricate answer, but it's actually simpler to just say: wait for me to fix the bug in Polyglossia, and you should be fine :-) Until then, though, you need to make sure that any run of English text is preceded by the right settings of \left- and \righthyphenmin, otherwise bad things will happen -- as you've experienced. You've got me confused on one point, though: is it Sanskrit or Hindi text you're typesetting? Not that it makes such a difference; and in the latter case we don't have hyphenation patterns for transliterated Hindi anyway, so the Sanskrit ones should do a reasonable job. Arthur -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex