How about "I'll" or "it's".

Regards,

Addison



> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
> Behalf Of John Cowan
> Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2002 4:40 AM
> To: Marco Cimarosti
> Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
> Subject: Re: FW: New version of TR29:
> 
> 
> Marco Cimarosti scripsit:
> 
> > The issue is making the error window as narrow as possible. My 
> assumption is
> > that is common words such as "c'", "d'", "j'", "l'", "n'", 
> "qu'", "s'", "t'"
> > or "v'" are more common than edge cases like "prud'homme".
> 
> How about this heuristic:
> 
> Break after an apostrophe that is the second or third letter in the
> word.  Do not break after apostrophes that come later.  This neatly
> handles (I think) all the English, Italian, and Esperanto cases, and
> a good many of the French ones.
> 
> -- 
> John Cowan  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  www.reutershealth.com  
> www.ccil.org/~cowan
> Consider the matter of Analytic Philosophy.  Dennett and Bennett 
> are well-known.
> Dennett rarely or never cites Bennett, so Bennett rarely or never 
> cites Dennett.
> There is also one Dummett.  By their works shall ye know them.  
> However, just as
> no trinities have fourth persons (Zeppo Marx notwithstanding), 
> Bummett is hardly
> known by his works.  Indeed, Bummett does not exist.  It is part 
> of the function
> of this and other e-mail messages, therefore, to do what they can 
> to create him.
> 
> 

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