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The "Included from" column indicates the first edition of Windows in which the font was included. Included typefaces with versions ... Kalinga [6] Regular, Bold: Odia ...
Klavika is a family of sans-serif fonts designed by Eric Olson and released by Process Type Foundry in 2004. It contains four weights: light, regular, medium, and bold (with corresponding italics) and variations of numerals. [1] The family of typefaces is described as straight-sided technical sans-serifs [2] flexible for editorial and identity ...
The following system fonts have been added with Yosemite: ITC Bodoni 72: Book, Italic, Bold (these three in separate fonts with lining and text figures), Small Caps, Ornaments (Sumner Stone) ITF Devanagari; Kohinoor Devanagari (Satya Rajpurohit) Luminari (Philip Bouwsma) Phosphate: Inline and Solid (Steve Jackaman & Ashley Muir)
The Kalinga script or Southern Nagari [2] is a Brahmic script used in the region of what is now modern-day Odisha, India and was primarily used to write Odia language in the inscriptions of the kingdom of Kalinga which was under the reign of early Eastern Ganga dynasty. [1]
[13] [f] Thus, the additional ligatures that are required for Fraktur typefaces will not be encoded in Unicode: support for these ligatures is a font engineering issue left up to font developers. [14] There are, however, two sets of Fraktur symbols in the Unicode blocks of Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols, Letterlike Symbols, and Latin Extended-E.
Calibri (/ k ə ˈ l iː b r i /) 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]
The Odia script (Odia: ଓଡ଼ିଆ ଅକ୍ଷର, romanized: Oḍiā akṣara, also Odia: ଓଡ଼ିଆ ଲିପି, romanized: Oḍiā lipi) is a Brahmic script used to write the Odia language.
Georgian scripts come in only a single typeface, [clarification needed] though word processors can apply automatic ("fake") [68] oblique and bold formatting to Georgian text. Traditionally, Asomtavruli was used for chapter or section titles, where Latin script might use bold or italic type.