Thanks to all who replied.
Nikos Platis wrote:
As others have mentioned, you probably do not need nothing more than
activating the required hyphenation patterns from the MikTeX settings.
The reason that different entries exist for ancient (polytonic) and
modern (monotonic) greek exist is that th
As others have mentioned, you probably do not need nothing more than
activating the required hyphenation patterns from the MikTeX settings.
The reason that different entries exist for ancient (polytonic) and
modern (monotonic) greek exist is that there are slight differences in
some rules between t
On Sat, Apr 24, 2010 at 10:40:20PM -0400, David Perry wrote:
> On CTAN I find the package xetex-greek, which looks like what I
> should be using since I typeset everything with xe(la)tex.
>
> MiKTeX 2.7 provides some hyphenation options for Greek, including
> ancient (see screen shot attached). I