| ligature |
In typography, two or more letters merged into one.
Ãâó: www.teleplex.net/jr/www3.teleplex.net%5Cprinter/gl...
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| ligature |
Two or more characters combined to represent a single typographical character. The modern Latin script uses only a few. Other scripts use many ligatures that depend on font and style. Some languages, such as Arabic, have mandatory ligatures; other languages have characters that were derived from ligatures, such as the German ligature of long and short "s" (? and the ampersand (&), which is the contracted form of the Latin word et.
Ãâó: www.stevenblack.com/intl%20glossary.html
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| ligature |
two or more letters that are grouped or 'tied' together, for example in some typefaces the 'fi' and 'oe' sequences overlapped which looked terrible, this is rectified by ligature.
Ãâó: open-site.org/Arts/Literature/Typography/Terminolo...
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| ligature |
A compound of two characters, eg "OE".
Ãâó: www.eki.ee/itstandard/def_en.shtml
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| ligature |
Ligatures are two or more characters in sequence joined into a single unit. For example, the ae-ligature (? and oe-ligature (?. They were used with movable type for thin characters that become illegible when run together, and in elegant handwriting. Ligatures are usually unnecessary in text designed for a computer screen, though they may be desirable when discussing historical documents or to accurately represent calligraphy.
Ãâó: www.robinlionheart.com/stds/html4/glossary
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