Italic
Pronunciation
- enPR: ÄtălʹÄk, IPA: /ɪˈtælɪk/, /aɪˈtælɪk/
Alternative forms
Full definition of italic
Adjective
italic
- (typography, of a typeface or font) Designed to resemble a handwriting style developed in Italy in the 16th century.
- (typography, of a typeface or font) Having letters that slant or lean to the right; oblique.The text was impossible to read: every other word was underlined or in a bold or italic font.
Usage notes
The sense of “oblique†is more recent, and still sometimes criticized, but is now by far the more common sense in everyday use.
Antonyms
- (oblique) upright
Noun
italic
(plural italics)- (typography) A typeface in which the letters slant to the right.
- Names of vessels, as the Kearsarge or the Alabama, are frequently put in italic.
- ... ROBERT GRANJON, possibly in collaboration with CLAUDE GARAMOND, had created an italic which matched Garamond Roman.
- An oblique handwriting style, such as used by Italian calligraphers of the Renaissance.
- Spenser uses two different scripts: an Elizabethan secretary hand for English texts, and an italic 'mixed' with secretary graphs for Latin texts ...