Italic
[ɪ'tælɪk]
解释:
(noun.) a style of handwriting with the letters slanting to the right.
(noun.) a typeface with letters slanting upward to the right.
(noun.) a branch of the Indo-European languages of which Latin is the chief representative.
(adj.) of or relating to the Italic languages; 'ancient Italic dialects' .
(adj.) characterized by slanting characters; 'italic characters' .
手打:特伦斯--From WordNet
解释:
(a.) Relating to Italy or to its people.
(a.) Applied especially to a kind of type in which the letters do not stand upright, but slope toward the right; -- so called because dedicated to the States of Italy by the inventor, Aldus Manutius, about the year 1500.
(n.) An Italic letter, character, or type (see Italic, a., 2.); -- often in the plural; as, the Italics are the author's. Italic letters are used to distinguish words for emphasis, importance, antithesis, etc. Also, collectively, Italic letters.
安德鲁手打
解释:
adj. of or relating to Italy or its people.—n. a native of Italy: the language of Italy.—vs.t. Ital′ianate Ital′ianise to make Italian.—vs.i. to play the Italian: to speak Italian.—n. Ital′ianism.—Italian architecture the style practised by the Italian architects of the 15th 16th and 17th centuries which originated in a revival of the ancient architecture of Rome; Italian warehouseman a dealer in the finer kinds of groceries as macaroni vermicelli dried fruits &c.—Italic version or It′ala a translation of the Bible into Latin based on a still older version called Old Latin and made probably in the time of Augustine.
编辑:梅布尔