What to do about Haitian orphans?

What are the proofreader's marks for widows and orphans?

  • What is the proper way to mark widows and orphans while proofreading a text using the Chicago Manual of Style's format? Usually when I have a proofreading job, I just write "orphan" or "widow" alongside the line in question. I really should know already if this practice is correct or not, but I'm basically self-taught and previous managing editors have not made an issue of my quirks. I have a new editor and want to make sure everything I do is correct. Thank you for your help.

  • Answer:

    I typeset books for a living, and I have always seen proofreaders just write widow or orphan next to the (circled) line in question. One thing you can do is ask for the house style guide – I often end up ignoring those notes because $publisher allows say, a 3/4 line widow,* and I award bonus points** to proofreaders who are aware of that. * not actually a widow if the house style guide allows it! ** my managing editor, who is the person who actually hires the proofreaders, does not care about my bonus points

anonymous at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source

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I've always used w or o inside a circle.

rtha

CMS actually doesn't specify, as far as I know. CMS 16, 2.113, "Checking overall appearance," merely defines the terms, and they aren't illustrated in Fig. 2.6, "Proofreaders' Marks," or Fig. 2.7, "Marked Proofs." That said, I would write the word alongside the line in question and circle it, as you do with any instructions to the typesetter. I'd HIGHLY recommend getting a copy of CMS or subscribing online. You are bound to come up with more questions that only that tome can answer for you. And if you're not sure about how to mark orphans and widows and are self-taught, there may be other marks that CMS does specify that you've been doing wrong. For some editors, it's no biggie, but others want to see everything by the book.

nevers

Yep, "widow" or "orphan" inside a circle next to the line in question.

scody

There is no official way to mark a lot of things. A circled flag always works great. If you want editors and compositors to love you, opt for clarity over some esoteric mark.

Camofrog

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