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ligature In typography, two or more letters merged into one.
Ãâó: www.teleplex.net/jr/www3.teleplex.net%5Cprinter/gl...
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
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...
ligature A compound of two characters, eg "OE".
Ãâó: www.eki.ee/itstandard/def_en.shtml
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Ligatures are usually unnecessary in text designed for a computer screen, though they may be desirable when discussing historical documents or to accurately represent calligraphy.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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