A glyph (pronounced /ˈɡlɪf/) is an element of writing. Two or more glyphs representing the same symbol, whether interchangeable or context-dependent, are called allographs; the abstract unit they are variants of is called a grapheme or character. Glyphs may also be ligatures, that is, compound characters, or diacritics.

Contents

Etymology

Look up glyph in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

The term has been used in English since 1727, borrowed from glyphe in use by French antiquaries (since 1701), from the Greek γλυφή, glyphē, "carving," from the verb γλύφειν, glýphein, "to hollow out, engrave, carve" (cognate to Latin glubere "to peel" and English cleave).

Compare the carved and incised "sacred glyphs" hieroglyphs, which have had a longer history in English dating from the first Elizabethan translation of Plutarch, who adopted "hieroglyphic" as a Latin adjective.

Maya glyph for Day 10 of the tzolkin calendar.

But "glyph" first came to widespread European attention with the engravings and in lithographs from Frederick Catherwood's drawings of undeciphered glyphs of the Maya civilization in the early 1840s.

Archaeology

In archaeology, a glyph is a carved or inscribed symbol. It may be a pictogram or ideogram, or part of a writing system such as a syllable or logogram.

Typography

The adjacent characters fi represented as one glyph.

In typography, a glyph is a particular graphical representation, in a particular typeface, of a grapheme, or sometimes several graphemes in combination (a composed glyph), or a part of a grapheme. In computing as well as typography, the term character refers to a grapheme or grapheme-like unit of text, as found in natural language writing systems (scripts). It may be a letter, a numeral, a punctuation mark, or a pictographic or decorative symbol such as dingbats. A character or grapheme is an abstract unit of text, whereas a glyph is a graphical unit.

For example, the sequence fi contains two characters, but can be represented by one glyph, the two characters being combined into a single unit known as a ligature. Conversely, some typewriters require the use of multiple glyphs to depict a single character, as an overstruck apostrophe and period to create an exclamation mark.

Most typographic glyphs originate from the characters of a typeface. In a typeface each character typically corresponds to a single glyph, but there are exceptions, such as a font used for a language with a large alphabet or complex writing system, where one character may correspond to several glyphs, or several characters to one glyph.

Graphonomics

In graphonomics, the term glyph is used for a non-character, i.e: either a sub-character or multi-character pattern.

Other uses

See also

Typography terminology
Page Pagination · Recto and verso · Margin · Column · Canons of page construction · Pull quote
Paragraph Widows and orphans · Leading · River · Alignment · Justification
Character Ligature · Letter-spacing · Kerning · Majuscule · Minuscule · Small caps · Initial · x-height · Baseline · Median · Cap height · Ascender · Descender · Diacritics · Counter · Text figures · Subscript and superscript · Dingbat · Glyph
Font Serif · Sans-serif · Italic · Oblique · Emphasis (bold)
Classifications
Roman type Old style · Transitional · Modern · Slab serif · Sans-serif · Script
Blackletter type Textualis · Rotunda · Schwabacher · Fraktur
Gaelic type Angular · Uncial
Punctuation Hanging punctuation · Hyphenation · Quotation mark · Prime mark · Dashes
Typesetting Type design · Type foundry · Movable type · Calligraphy · Phototypesetting · Letterpress · Typeface · Font · Computer font · “ETAOIN SHRDLU” · “Lorem ipsum” · Punchcutting · Pangram
Typographic units Point · Pica · Cicero · Em · En · Agate
Digital typography Font formats · Typesetting software · Character encoding · Rasterization · Hinting

Categories: Infographics | Symbols | Typography | Graphemes | Archaeology

 

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