Hi, On Wed, Mar 03, 2004 at 06:06:51AM +0100, Roland Goretzki wrote: > > I have just completed some songs for a German composer, and he sais > > that ess-tset (ß) shall be broken s-s ("heis-sen"). > > AFAIK this is correct, but only for songs. In this case I do the same. > (In songs it is no linebreak, but each syllable is fixed to each note.) > > But I don't know, in which way it is handled in the so called "neue > Rechtschreibung" (what does it mean in English, I don't know ...?)
I couldn't find any special rules for the typesetting of songs. The 21st edition of the Duden gives the following rules (corresponding to the new orthography): - The ess-tset is usually treated like any other consonant. An example similar to "heißen" is given in rule 129, 2nd bullet: rei- ßen Accordingly, it should be "hei- ßen". - But there's an special exemption in rule 130, 2nd bullet: If "ss" is used as an replacement for "ß" (the official rules allow this in §25, section E2, e.g., when using a typewriter without a ß-Key), then "ss" is treated as two consonants. The Duden actually gives the example "heis- sen". Conclusion: If you write "ß" at all, then "hei- ßen" is orthograpically correct. But if you don't have an ess-tset on your keyboard, then it's still correct to replace "ß" by "ss" and to syllabify "heissen" as "heis- sen". Regards Christoph -- http://www.informatik.tu-darmstadt.de/TI/Mitarbeiter/cludwig.html LiDIA: http://www.informatik.tu-darmstadt.de/TI/LiDIA/Welcome.html _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user