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Typeface Family Spacing Weights/Styles Target script Included from Can be installed on Example image Aharoni: Sans Serif: Proportional: Bold: Hebrew: XP, Vista
Arabic typography. Arabic typography is the typography of letters, graphemes, characters or text in Arabic script, for example for writing Arabic, Persian, or Urdu. 16th century Arabic typography was a by-product of Latin typography with Syriac and Latin proportions and aesthetics. It lacked expertise in the three core aspects of Arabic writing ...
Amiri (typeface) Amiri ( Arabic: الأميري) is a naskh typeface for Arabic script designed by Khaled Hosny. [1] [2] The beta was released in December 2011. [1] As of October 22, 2019, it is hosted on 67,000 websites, and is served by the Google Fonts API approximately 74.8 million times per week. [3]
Traditional Arabic is an Arabic naskh-based typeface first developed by Monotype as Series 589 in the spring of 1956. [1] [2] It featured a system of interlocking sorts to allow for the diacritics to properly display over the letters they modify.
Metrically compatible with. Carlito. Calibri ( / kəˈliːbri /) is a digital sans-serif typeface family in the humanist or modern style. It was designed by Luc (as) de Groot in 2002–2004 and released to the general public in 2007, with Microsoft Office 2007 and Windows Vista. [3] In Office 2007, it replaced Times New Roman as the default ...
Scheherazade New, formerly Scheherazade, is a traditional Naskh styled font for Arabic script created by SIL, freely available under the Open Font License. It supports a wide range of Arabic-based writing system encoded in Unicode. The font offers two family members: regular and bold. [1]
Myriad (typeface) Myriad is a humanist sans-serif typeface designed by Robert Slimbach and Carol Twombly for Adobe Systems. Myriad was intended as a neutral, general-purpose typeface that could fulfill a range of uses and have a form easily expandable by computer-aided design to a large range of weights and widths.
Maghrebi letters appeared in the first known Arabic alphabet to have been printed, in a 1505 book of the Spanish lexicographer Pedro de Alcalá. In Iberia, the Arabic script was used to write Romance languages such as Mozarabic, Portuguese, Spanish or Ladino. This writing system was referred to as Aljamiado, from ʿajamiyah (عجمية).