Template:Block quote next to floating content

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{{{1}}}

50px Template documentation

This template overrides the default blockquote { overflow: hidden; } style rule, which disrupts the flow of block quotes next to floating content. For usage instructions, see {{Quote}}.

Examples

With a plain {{Quote}}:

Text in caption over infobox
Subheader of the infobox
Text in uppermost cell of infobox
Subheader of the infobox
Second subheader of the infobox

Democracy tries to create and guarantee independence for as many as possible in their opinions, way of life, and occupation. For this purpose democracy must withhold the political suffrage both from those who have nothing and from those who are really rich, as being the two intolerable classes of men. At the removal of these classes it must always work, because they are continually calling its task in question. In the same way democracy must prevent all measures that seem to aim at party organisation. For the three great foes of independence, in that threefold sense, are the have-nots, the rich, and the parties. I speak of democracy as of a thing to come. What at present goes by that name is distinguished from older forms of government only by the fact that it drives with new horses; the roads and the wheels are the same as of yore. Has the danger really become less with these conveyances of the commonwealth?

Template:Clear

With {{Block quote next to floating content}}:

Text in caption over infobox
Subheader of the infobox
Text in uppermost cell of infobox
Subheader of the infobox
Second subheader of the infobox

Democracy tries to create and guarantee independence for as many as possible in their opinions, way of life, and occupation. For this purpose democracy must withhold the political suffrage both from those who have nothing and from those who are really rich, as being the two intolerable classes of men. At the removal of these classes it must always work, because they are continually calling its task in question. In the same way democracy must prevent all measures that seem to aim at party organisation. For the three great foes of independence, in that threefold sense, are the have-nots, the rich, and the parties. I speak of democracy as of a thing to come. What at present goes by that name is distinguished from older forms of government only by the fact that it drives with new horses; the roads and the wheels are the same as of yore. Has the danger really become less with these conveyances of the commonwealth?

Plain (not block quotation) text, for comparison:

Text in caption over infobox
Subheader of the infobox
Text in uppermost cell of infobox
Subheader of the infobox
Second subheader of the infobox
"Democracy tries to create and guarantee independence for as many as possible in their opinions, way of life, and occupation. For this purpose democracy must withhold the political suffrage both from those who have nothing and from those who are really rich, as being the two intolerable classes of men. At the removal of these classes it must always work, because they are continually calling its task in question. In the same way democracy must prevent all measures that seem to aim at party organisation. For the three great foes of independence, in that threefold sense, are the have-nots, the rich, and the parties. I speak of democracy as of a thing to come. What at present goes by that name is distinguished from older forms of government only by the fact that it drives with new horses; the roads and the wheels are the same as of yore. Has the danger really become less with these conveyances of the commonwealth?"
Script error: No such module "in5".— Friedrich Nietzsche, Human, All-Too-Human

Template:Clear

Bad behavior of this template

With {{Block quote next to floating content}} next to small floated items, it becomes quite bletcherous:

Test
Test

Democracy tries to create and guarantee independence for as many as possible in their opinions, way of life, and occupation. For this purpose democracy must withhold the political suffrage both from those who have nothing and from those who are really rich, as being the two intolerable classes of men. At the removal of these classes it must always work, because they are continually calling its task in question. In the same way democracy must prevent all measures that seem to aim at party organisation. For the three great foes of independence, in that threefold sense, are the have-nots, the rich, and the parties. I speak of democracy as of a thing to come. What at present goes by that name is distinguished from older forms of government only by the fact that it drives with new horses; the roads and the wheels are the same as of yore. Has the danger really become less with these conveyances of the commonwealth?