An alternative alphabet of capitals sized like lowercase letters: more common in serif faces Used in professional typography for abbreviations and acronyms in the midst of normal text
An alphabet of small capital letters available in most type faces, approximately the size of the lower case letters; usually used in combination with larger capital letters to top
a set of capital letters which are smaller than standard and are equal in size to the lower case letters for that typesize
An alphabet of SMALL CAPITAL LETTERS available in most type faces, approximately the size of the lower case letters; usually used in combination with larger capital letters
The uppercase version of each alphabetic character reduced to the x-height of that typeface
An alphabet of small capital letters available in most roman type faces approximately the size of the lower case letters Used in combination with larger capital letters
a font of capitals that are approximately x-height, generally used for a m , p m , b c , a d ; often used for Initial with full caps in display elements
A font of capital letters that are slightly smaller than the standard capital letters in that typeface
Another name for smaller companies, as measured by their market capitalisation Our definition of a smaller company is one which has a market capitalisation of less than US$500 million, which is still quite sizeable by most standards Usually a switch discount of up to 3% off the offer price is given