Search:italic -> ITALIC
italic
i t a l i c hex:#105;#116;#97;#108;#105;#99;
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- Italic - a. - Relating to Italy or to its people.
- Italic - a. - Applied especially to a kind of type in which the letters do not stand upright, but slope toward the right; -- so called because dedicated to the States of Italy by the inventor, Aldus Manutius, about the year 1500.
- Italic - n. - An Italic letter, character, or type (see Italic, a., 2.); -- often in the plural; as, the Italics are the author's. Italic letters are used to distinguish words for emphasis, importance, antithesis, etc. Also, collectively, Italic letters.
- Italicism - n. - A phrase or idiom peculiar to the Italian language; to Italianism.
- Italicism - n. - The use of Italics.
- Italicize - v. t. & i. - To print in Italic characters; to underline written letters or words with a single line; as, to Italicize a word; Italicizes too much.
- Italicized - imp. & p. p. - of Italicize
- Italicizing - p. pr. & vb. n. - of Italicize
- Italics - pl. - of Italic
- Roman - a. - Upright; erect; -- said of the letters or kind of type ordinarily used, as distinguished from Italic characters.
- Italic - n. - An Italic letter, character, or type (see Italic, a., 2.); -- often in the plural; as, the Italics are the author's. Italic letters are used to distinguish words for emphasis, importance, antithesis, etc. Also, collectively, Italic letters.
- Composite - v. t. - Belonging to a certain order which is composed of the Ionic order grafted upon the Corinthian. It is called also the Roman or the Italic order, and is one of the five orders recognized by the Italian writers of the sixteenth century. See Capital.
- Italicize - v. t. & i. - To print in Italic characters; to underline written letters or words with a single line; as, to Italicize a word; Italicizes too much.
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