The best method I have found for this is to rely on Gregorio to hyphenate for you by making sure the neum list is longer than the Latin syllable. This is fairly easy to do by simply adding a blank neum to the list. That is to say, add blanks to inside the () when you need Gregorio to space things out a bit and/or when you want to hyphenate. I find this to produce better results than manually forcing a hypenation.
Sent from my iPad > On Dec 12, 2013, at 9:34, "R. Padraic Springuel" <[email protected]> > wrote: > > I'm setting some chant for members of my monastery (including myself) for > whom the rules of Latin syllabification are not instinctive. As a result, I > would like to force hyphens to appear between each syllable. Is there a way > to do this? Right now I've tried manually inserting a hyphen before each > subsequent syllable in a word (e.g. writing "Sa()-pi()-en()-ti()-a,()") but > this introduces double hyphens when gregorio feels a hyphen is needed. Now I > could manually delete these unneeded hyphens, but I'm hoping there's a way to > automate this process and save me some tedious work. > -- > > Br. Samuel > (R. Padraic Springuel) > > _______________________________________________ > Gregorio-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-users _______________________________________________ Gregorio-users mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-users

