Dear list, In short, my question is: why does \wordright cause a line-break when the line preceding it breaks with hyphenation and does not otherwise? How to avoid it (if at all possible)? I have this delimitedtext instance called 'amnata' defined as below: \definemeasure[amnatamargin][3cm] \definedelimitedtext [amnata] \setupdelimitedtext [amnata] [ left=, right=, leftmargin={\measure{amnatamargin}}, rightmargin={\measure{amnatamargin}}, ] I am using this to quote paragraph(s) of other authors. Since, I also want to indicate where the quote is from, I use this as follows: \startamnata ⋮ \wordright{author} \stopamnata so that the author's name appears at the right-edge of the block. When the penultimate line inside the block breaks without hyphenation, then argument of \wordright is typeset as expected (i.e. in the same line). On the other hand, when the penultimate line inside this block breaks with hyphenation, the argument of \wordright is pushed to the next line even when there is enough space for it on the same line. Here is a sample illustrating this: \startamnata A quote from another author : Suppose that thereisalongwordhere. \wordright{– author} \stopamnata \startamnata A quote from another author : Here, the text does not cause hyphenation in the first line. \wordright{– author} \stopamnata [I have attached the output here as an image] How do I ensure that this does not happen, if that is possible at all? I suppose this is expected behaviour but I am not able to understand why. Thanks, kauśika