non-italic









non-italic


adjective

  1. designating or pertaining to a style of printing types in which the letters usually slope to the right, patterned upon a compact manuscript hand, and used for emphasis, to separate different kinds of information, etc.: These words are in italic type.
  2. (initial capital letter) of or relating to Italy, especially ancient Italy or its tribes.

noun

  1. Often italics. italic type.
  2. (initial capital letter) a branch of the Indo-European family of languages, including ancient Latin, Oscan, Umbrian, and modern Romance.

noun

  1. a branch of the Indo-European family of languages that includes many of the ancient languages of Italy, such as Venetic and the Osco-Umbrian group, Latin, which displaced them, and the Romance languages

adjective

  1. denoting, relating to, or belonging to this group of languages, esp the extinct ones

adjective

  1. Also: Italian of, relating to, or denoting a style of handwriting with the letters slanting to the right

noun

  1. a style of printing type modelled on this, chiefly used to indicate emphasis, a foreign word, etcCompare roman 1
  2. (often plural) italic type or print

1610s (adj.), 1670s (n.) “italic type,” from Latin italicus “Italian” (see Italian); so called because it was introduced in 1501 by Aldus Manutius, printer of Venice (who also gave his name to Aldine), and first used in an edition of Virgil dedicated to Italy. Earlier (1570s) the word was used for the plain, sloping style of handwriting, as opposed to Gothic. Related: Italics.

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