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| | 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. |
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http://wikipedia.lotsofinformation.com/wiki/index.php/Serif
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| | 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. |
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http://www.rushcomputerart.com/typography.htm
(240 words)
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| | 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. |
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http://www.nutsandboltsguide.com/apa.html
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