Hypothetical distribution of languages in Iron Age Italy, 6th century BC The Italic subfamily is a member of the Centum branch of the Indo-European language family.
The Italic speakers were not native to Italy, but migrated into the Italian Peninsula in the course of the 2nd millennium BC, and may have been originally an offshoot of the Celts.
The Italic languages are first attested in writing from Umbrian and Faliscan inscriptions dating to the 7th century BC.
There may be other variants in the font family as well, such as fonts with old-style numerals, small-caps numerals, condensed or expanded letters, etc. CSS 2.1 has no properties that select those.
Usage across font families is quite variant; for example, a font that one might think of as being bold might be described as being Regular, Roman, Book, Medium, Semi- or DemiBold, Bold, or Black, depending on how fl the "normal" face of the font is within the design.
The association of other weights within a family to the numerical weight values is intended only to preserve the ordering of darkness within that family.
This font family was first inspired by an experiment to try to make a legible upper and lower alphabet with the smallest grid possible that would still describe the letterforms.
The grid was expanded a bit for aesthetic reasons to a 3x8 grid, But not restricted so severely and so occasionally goes wider than 3 for the certain letterforms.
Cypher is a versatile family of 24 fonts – 4 widths, each with 3 weights and their accompanying italics.
Latter-day Family Resources: Italic Handwriting Workbook Level F (5th)
Practice books continue up through the grades, ending in Level G for 6th graders which is a comprehensive review of all letter forms, and a brief introduction to the edged pen.
No special equipment is ever needed: you can write italic with any pen or pencil.
Jim Wilt(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
No matter what level the site is, when you restore the site, you must create a blank site at the destination without applying a site template.
To do so, begin creating the site collection, top-level site, or subsite as usual, but when you get to the page where you are asked to select a template, close the browser window without making a selection.
Also, because only one account is created for each e-mail address, a shared e-mail address results in a merged user account that is given all of the rights that each original user had, and is also listed as the user name for any items added to the site by any of the original users.
Proto-Italic(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Proto-Italic refers to the putative ancestor of the Italic language family, or to our reconstruction of it.
The family comprises the Romance group, Oscan, Umbrian, Paelignian, Marsian, Marrucinian, Vestinian and Volscian; but there is also evidence of "Pre-Italic" speech-forms spoken in Italy which may have some more distant connection with the family: Ligurian,
Celtic), Raetic, Venetic, Messapic, Sicel/Siculan and East Italic.