italic type - traducción al árabe
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italic type - traducción al árabe

FONT STYLE CHARACTERISED BY CURSIVE TYPEFACE AND SLANTED DESIGN
Italics; Italicized; Italicize; Italicise; Italic font; Italic text; Italicised; Iranic type; Italicism; Italicising; Italicizing; Italicisation; Italicization; Upright italic; Reverse italic; Contra-italic
  • 4 shapes of Adobe Arabic font (Normal, Italic, Bold, Bold-Italic)
  • 1527}}. At that time italic was only used for the lower case and not for capitals.
  • [[Computer Modern]]'s 'upright italic' font.
  • access-date=2018-12-18}}</ref>
  • 4 shapes of Farsi font (Normal, Iranic, Bold, Bold-Iranic)
  • Figgins]] foundry of London. The typeface is an example of the increasingly attention-grabbing, bold and dramatic fonts becoming popular in British display typography in the early nineteenth century.
  • A page from La Operina by [[Ludovico Vicentino degli Arrighi]], showing the chancery writing style.
  • url=http://www.garamond.culture.fr/en/page/the_article_by_beatrice_warde}}</ref>
  • Niccoli's]] cursive script, which developed into Italic type.
  • access-date=17 August 2015}}</ref> [[Seravek]], a modern humanist family, has a more informal italic in the style of handwriting.
  • Straight italic type within normal italics (Latin and Cyrillic)
  • access-date=6 April 2017}}</ref> The initial is hand-lettered.

italic type         
حروف طباعية مائلة لإبراز كلمة أو جملة
italicize         
طبع بالحرف المائل
ITALICIZED         

الصفة

إِيطَالِيّ

Definición

Italicizing
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Italicize.

Wikipedia

Italic type

In typography, italic type is a cursive font based on a stylised form of calligraphic handwriting. Along with blackletter and roman type, it served as one of the major typefaces in the history of Western typography.

Owing to the influence from calligraphy, italics normally slant slightly to the right, like this. Different glyph shapes from roman type are usually used – another influence from calligraphy – and upper-case letters may have swashes, flourishes inspired by ornate calligraphy.

Historically, italics were a distinct style of type used entirely separately from roman type, but they have come to be used in conjunction—most fonts now come with a roman type and an italic type. In this usage, italics are a way to emphasise key points in a printed text, to identify many types of creative works, to cite foreign words or phrases, or, when quoting a speaker, a way to show which words they stressed. One manual of English usage described italics as "the print equivalent of underlining"; in other words, underscore in a manuscript directs a typesetter to use italic.

In fonts which do not have true italics, oblique type may be used instead. The difference between true italics and oblique type is that true italics have some letterforms different from the roman type, but in oblique type letters are just slanted without changing the roman type form.

The name comes from the fact that calligraphy-inspired typefaces were first designed in Italy, to replace documents traditionally written in a handwriting style called chancery hand. Aldus Manutius and Ludovico Arrighi (both between the 15th and 16th centuries) were the main type designers involved in this process at the time.