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  2. Alternating caps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternating_caps

    Alternating caps, [1] also known as studly caps [a], sticky caps (where "caps" is short for capital letters), or spongecase (in reference to the "Mocking Spongebob" internet meme) is a form of text notation in which the capitalization of letters varies by some pattern, or arbitrarily (often also omitting spaces between words and occasionally some letters).

  3. Mojibake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojibake

    Mojibake (Japanese: 文字化け; IPA: [mod͡ʑibake], 'character transformation') is the garbled or gibberish text that is the result of text being decoded using an unintended character encoding. [1]

  4. Truecasing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truecasing

    Truecasing is unnecessary in languages whose scripts do not have a distinction between uppercase and lowercase letters. This includes all languages not written in the Latin , Greek , Cyrillic or Armenian alphabets , such as Korean , Japanese , Chinese , Thai , Hebrew , Arabic , Hindi , and Georgian .

  5. International Phonetic Alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Phonetic...

    It has been argued that the lower-pharyngeal (epiglottal) fricatives ʜ and ʢ are better characterized as trills, rather than as fricatives that have incidental trilling. [94] This has the advantage of merging the upper-pharyngeal fricatives [ħ, ʕ] together with the epiglottal plosive [ʡ] and trills [ʜ ʢ] into a single pharyngeal column ...

  6. Small caps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_caps

    Small caps, petite caps and italic used for emphasis True small caps (top), compared with scaled small caps (bottom), generated by OpenOffice.org Writer. In typography, small caps (short for small capitals) are characters typeset with glyphs that resemble uppercase letters but reduced in height and weight close to the surrounding lowercase letters or text figures. [1]

  7. Capitalization in English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalization_in_English

    Old English did not always make a distinction between uppercase and lowercase, and at best had embossed or decorated letters indicating sections. Middle English capitalization in manuscripts remained haphazard, and was often done for visual aesthetics more than grammar; in poetry, the first letter of each line of verse is often capitalized.

  8. All caps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_caps

    In the eye-movement study by Tinker and Patterson, the principal difference in oculomotor patterns between lower case and all capitals was the very large increase in number of fixation pauses for reading the all-capital print. [31] All caps text should be eliminated from most forms of composition, according to Tinker:

  9. Letter case - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_case

    The lower-case "a" and upper-case "A" are the two case variants of the first letter in the English alphabet.. Letter case is the distinction between the letters that are in larger uppercase or capitals (more formally majuscule) and smaller lowercase (more formally minuscule) in the written representation of certain languages.