WD: Definitions of Typesetting Terms in WordLast reviewed: February 18, 1998Article ID: Q36401 |
The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARYThe following is a list of terms commonly used in typesetting:
ASCENDER- The portion of a lowercase letter that rises above the main body (ex. b, d, and h). BASELINE- The imaginary line on which letters in a line of text rests. DESCENDER- The portion of a lowercase letter that hangs below its main body (e.g. g and p). EM- A unit of measure equal to the point size of the type in use (e.g. a 12 point em is 12 points wide). FONT- The complete assortment of characters in one typeface. KERN- To adjust the spacing between letters, usually to move them closer together. LEADING- (pronounced ledding) In composition, the distance between lines of type measured in points. LINE SPACING- The amount of vertical spacing, expressed in points, from the baseline of one line of text, to the baseline of the next line. MEAN LINE- The imaginary line on which the top parts of most of the lowercase letters set (not the ascenders). PICA- One-sixth of an inch. A pica equals 12 points. POINTS- Standard unit of measure for type that is approximately equal to 1/72". SANS SERIF- A font that does not have serifs (e.g. Helvetica, Modern). See Serif. SERIF- Fonts that have accents at the end of character strokes. (e.g. Times, Roman) X-HEIGHT- The distance between the baseline and the mean line. MORE INFORMATIONThe following diagram illustrates the positions of some of the above terms: __ XXXX X -- Ascender | X X X | mean line_____XXXXXX______XXXX_______X___X__ _ | X X X X X X | x-height | Point base line_____X____X______X___X_______XXXX__ _| (mean to base) | Size X | XXXX -- Descender __| |
Additional query words: typography
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