Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "italics"

Lexicographically close words:
ita; italiani; italiano; italicised; italicized; italienische; italienischen; italiennes; italische; itan
  1. Footnote 22: I supply the passage in square brackets (the italics are my own) from the earlier volume to explain Mr Freeman's reference.

  2. Footnote 8: The italics are his own, Domesday Book, p.

  3. I have distinguished by italics the lines to which I desire the reader's attention, and have added a few notes to clear up some passages which might appear obscure.

  4. Words in italics are surrounded by underscores, like this.

  5. The passage in Italics is also quoted by Cossali, p.

  6. In the foot-notes, words in italics are from the commentary of the Jelaleyn; notes followed by the initial S.

  7. Note on text: Italicized words or phrases are capitalized, if the italics were used for emphasis, or put in quotation marks, if the italics indicated a quotation.

  8. I have marked in Italics the variations.

  9. The parts distinguished by Italics were rejected.

  10. The lines in Italics Johnson had scratched with red ink, probably after having made use of them.

  11. Diseases are organized into the following six exposure categories shown in italics and listed in typical descending order of risk.

  12. Few treatises on printing or the development of books give any idea of the immense popularity of italics during the sixteenth century.

  13. Both the Greek type and the italics were the outcome of confused thinking.

  14. Here we find little vignettes, much smaller than those in the Malermi Bible, with a headline over them and a quatrain in italics beneath, the whole enclosed in an ornamental frame.

  15. Italics have been dropped on leading alpha characters (a.

  16. Italics have been added to words missed by the printer.

  17. If the editor of the Tracts (1774) were to believed, the italics would have to begin with George, No.

  18. The two phrases which we have taken the liberty of putting into italics could scarcely have occurred to any other member of the Committee of War.

  19. Sir Thomas's ancestors, we have taken the liberty of indicating the names on which reliance can be placed, by printing them in italics (see p.

  20. Rilla was as fond of italics as most girls of fifteen are--and the bitterest drop in her cup was her suspicion that he told Di more of his secrets than he told her.

  21. When I was fifteen I talked in italics and superlatives too," said Miss Oliver sarcastically.

  22. Words and phrases in italics are surrounded by underscores, like this.

  23. In passages here quoted from Harper’s Weekly, the italics are ours.

  24. Despite the suggestions, advice, entreaties, expostulations, and warnings of her old colleagues and counsellors who had made her work in India possible [Italics mine.

  25. He puts in italics the word not; desirous doubtless to indicate the unworthiness of other theosophists.

  26. Another feature of this edition, as of others of her works produced after her death, is what he calls "a systematic use of italics and capitals.

  27. The italics again indicate that denial of choice is the custom, while the elopement indicates the same thing, for if there were liberty of choice there would be no need of eloping.

  28. In the above case, on the contrary, as the italics show, the selfish parents benefit by making the girl refuse to go with that man, keeping her as a bait for another profitable suitor.

  29. He claims the Fijians on the peculiar ground (the italics are mine) that among them "forced marriages are comparatively rare among the higher classes.

  30. The italics are mine; they make it obvious that the choice of the girls is not taken into account and that they can escape parental tyranny only by running away.

  31. In this text version, italics that originally served specifically for emphasis have been converted to uppercase.

  32. Italics that seemed merely to set off titles, words or phrases from the context have been marked with underscores before and after.

  33. In Webster's dictionary letters which are unmarked have an obscure sound often not unlike uh, or are silent, and letters printed in italics are nearly elided, so very slight is the sound they have if it can be said to exist at all.

  34. Words that should appear in italics should be underlined once, in small capitals twice, in capitals three times.

  35. This use of Italics the teacher and the pupil will please note here and elsewhere.

  36. The forms below in Italics are regular; and those in smaller type are obsolete, and need not be committed to memory.

  37. Graces of classical mythology, Barnes develops the topic in the next sonnet after this manner (the italics are my own): Why did rich Nature graces grant to thee, Since thou art such a niggard of thy grace?

  38. Arbitrary and irregular use of italics by Elizabethan and Jacobean printers.

  39. Elizabethan printers were not erratic in their uses of italics or capital letters, but an examination of a very large number of Elizabethan and Jacobean books has brought me to an exactly opposite conclusion.

  40. The italics indicate the obvious equivoque, and indicate it imperfectly.

  41. The Senators whose names are printed in italics became involved in the confusion which led to the passage of the measure.

  42. When the test came on the floor of the Senate, the nine of the eleven Senators whose names are printed in italics voted for the Wright bill and against the Stetson bill.

  43. All italics in this extract are in the original.

  44. Italics and black-faced type have been introduced freely, to call attention to matter of special importance for instruction.

  45. The italics are used in this reproduction to call attention to important matters.

  46. Italics and black-faced type are as in the original.

  47. The words in italics would make the definition more complete.

  48. The italics are my own: "It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amenable to the suit of any individual without its consent.


  49. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "italics" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.