On Wed 14 Sep 2016 at 12:04:30 (+0200), Simon Albrecht wrote: > On 14.09.2016 09:46, Pierre Perol-Schneider wrote: > >Hi James, > > > >See: > >http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.18/Documentation/notation/common-notation-for-vocal-music#multiple-syllables-to-one-note
That's elision (if that's the correct term), something quite different. It implies that you barrel through the a and e to get to the i. > >2016-09-14 8:39 GMT+02:00 James Evensen <jimeven...@gmail.com > ><mailto:jimeven...@gmail.com>>: > > > > Can I put a tie between words in lyrics? In choral music, I've > > noticed that the composer will sometimes use this notation to > > indicate that the singer is not to breathe in-between two > > particular words. I've looked around, but the only examples I've > > seen of ties used in Lilypond are between notes. > > > > IIUC you meant two words on two notes without a breath inbetween, right? Correct. Attached is what must be one of the most eyeballed instances. My workaround is: high~ in or even: high~ ~in if there's a line break involved. But a real, breakable one would be great. Cheers, David.
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