i
ia
ib
ic
id
ie
if
ig
ih
ii
ik
il
im
in
io
ip
iq
ir
is
it
iu
iv
iw
ix
Перевод: italic
[прилагательное] италийский; курсивный; [существительное] курсив
Тезаурус:
- Italic type came from the rapid, flowing writing of chancery scribes.
- Sam parked his Mini alongside a smart Volkswagen bus with "Greycoats School" painted in high-class italic lettering along its side.
- There would still be the unnecessary complexity of m and w; such diverse forms as roman, italic, capital and lower-case letters; the lack of relationship between shapes of letters representing similar sounds (v, f) alongside similarities in shape for dissimilar sounds (e, f); the haphazard order of letters in the alphabet (one might at least expect the vowels to be grouped together at the beginning or end); and the need to backtrack to dot i's and cross t's.
- However, none of them has been found in an archaeological context and they have aroused considerable suspicion: they could be relatively modern copies loosely based on Italic originals; they could be genuine prehistoric imports; or they could be perfectly genuine figures brought to Britain relatively recently as curios and since discarded or lost.
- The type, Roman and italic, is described in Baskett's stock list as "A very large ffount of Double Pica, new, the largest in England."
- He certainly had no patience with the teaching of italic handwriting.
- Scientific examination has shown that they are made of bronze similar to that used in genuine Italic figures from Italy and the patination appears to have developed over a long period, suggesting that they are not modern copies.
- They bear some resemblance to figurines of the Italic culture of central Italy of the mid-first millennium BC.
- the same as the containing font, but italic.
- The bibliographer Lowndes, over a hundred years ago, categorically listed eight different title-pages for the first edition of Milton's Paradise Lost , pointing out such differences as large or small italic capitals for the poet's name; in one case the use of his initials only-groups of stars between words, or none; with or without fleur-de-lis ornaments, etc.
- The Chronicle series of dip pens includes five specialist sets: Roundhand I and II, Italic, Craft and Poster.
- Henry normally wrote a neat, italic script; it was, according to the more malicious of his colleagues, his only real legal qualification.
- In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries this cursive italic style gained ground as an alternative to secretary, although as Hector says ( op cit ), "By 1600 it was being written with such magnificent disregard of any calligraphical rules that it might be illegible to the writer's contemporaries and compatriots."
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