(isim) harfin uzatılmış çizgisi

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) harfin uzatılmış çizgisi
Turkish - English
serif
A short line added to the tops and bottoms of traditional typefaces, such as Times Roman
A serif is a small ornamental mark at the ends of a letter Serifs have many variations, such as hairline, slab and wedge Serifs originated as the points at which Roman stonecutters inserted their chisels into the stone Serifs can be seen on typefaces such as Times New Roman
An extra projection from the main stroke of letters in certain type faces
Small decorative strokes that are added to the end of a letter's main strokes Serifs improve readability by leading the eye along the line of type
fonts have short cross-lines at the ends of the main strokes of many letters An example is Times Roman Sans Serif fonts are lacking such cross-lines
Small protusion, not in itself distinguishing two characters, at the end of a stroke of a writing instrument Historical origin was in the brush strokes traced to guide Roman inscription carvers It subsequently served to strengthen the edges of characters in printing type
The short lines found at the tops and bottoms of a serif typeface
A small line or embellishment finishing off the strokes of letters in some fonts Well-known serif fonts include Souvenir, Times Roman and Garamond
style of letters which have short lines stemming from the upper and lower ends of the strokes of a letter
The fine lines stemming from and at an angle to the upper and lower ends of the main strokes of a letterfor example, the little “feet” on the bottom of the vertical strokes in the uppercase letter “M” in Times Roman typeface
{i} small line which caps the tops and bottoms of letters in some typefaces (Printing)
Any of the short lines or ornaments at the upper or lower ends of the strokes that form a character in a typeface Also, a typeface whose characters contain serifs See also sans serif
a short horizontal line added to the tops and bottoms of traditional typefaces, such as Times Roman
A small cross stroke at the end of the main stroke of the letter, Times Roman is a serif font style
a short flat line at the top or bottom of some printed letters sans serif (Probably from schreef , from schriven )
The short cross-lines at the ends of the main strokes of many characters in some typefaces
the short, cross-lines at the ends of many letters in some typestyles
A cross-stroke at the end of a stem or terminal in a character The class of typefaces with serifs Examples are Times, Bodoni, Georgia and Souvenir Also sometimes called "roman", although roman is more correctly used to describe type that is neither italic nor bold (see above)
Êthe short, cross-lines at the ends of many letters in some typestyles
The short crosslines at the ends of the main strokes of letters in certain type styles
(isim) harfin uzatılmış çizgisi
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