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Topic: Serif


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 Production First Software Encyclopedia of Typography and Electronic Communication : S
Typeface examples include: Cheltenham, Gloucester Old Style, Sorbonne.
Square Serif A style developed during the 19th century.
Sans serif originated in the 19th century, but only became popularized in the 20th century.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/profirst/s.htm   (7225 words)

  
 Serif - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The etymology of "serif" is obscure, but in any case almost as recent as the face.
The oldest citations in the Oxford English Dictionary are 1841 for sans serif, which the OED gives as sanserif, and 1830 for serif.
This page was last modified 19:00, 24 Oct 2004.
http://wikipedia.lotsofinformation.com/wiki/index.php/Serif   (268 words)

  
 Typography
Modern: In typography, Modern is a style of typeface developed in the late 18th century that continued through much of the 19th century.
Sans Serif is a letter Type which does not have serifs -- (serifs being the little extra strokes found at the end of the main vertical and horizontal strokes of some letterforms) -- so again, :) sans serif implies that there is no serif...
Serif: A serif is the little extra stroke found at the end of main vertical and horizontal strokes of some letterforms.
http://www.rushcomputerart.com/typography.htm   (240 words)

  
 The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing
Print on only one side of the page, in black ink.
Use a plain serif font such as Times Roman or Courier, or a plain non-serif font like Aria.
APA format requires use of a manuscript header, not just a page number.
http://www.nutsandboltsguide.com/apa.html   (4677 words)

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