Grecs du roi

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
A page from Robert Estienne’s Editio Regia, which was typeset using the Grecs du roi.

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Unadapted borrowing from French Grecs du roi (literally king’s Greeks).

Proper noun[edit]

the Grecs du roi

  1. (typography) An influential Greek minuscule typeface created by Claude Garamond.
    • 1922, Daniel Berkeley Updike, Printing Types, Their History, Forms, and Use; A Study in Survivals[1], page 236:
      Garamond's caractères de l'Université, in four sizes of roman and italic, and the grecs du roi in three sizes, became the nucleus of the magnificent collection of types now belonging to the Imprimerie Nationale de France.
    • 1992, David McKitterick, A History of Cambridge University Press: Volume 2, Scholarship and Commerce, 1698-1872[2], page 66:
      In Paris, the Grecs du Roi had been celebrated ever since they had been cut by Claude Garamond in the mid-sixteenth century; but they remained privileged types, restricted for the use of the Imprimerie Royale.
    • 1992, Nicolas Barker, Aldus Manutius and the Development of Greek Script & Type in the Fifteenth Century[3], page 2:
      Vergecio's hand became in turn the model for the grecs du roi, themselves the model by which Greek type was measured for almost three hundred years.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Grecs du roi.

French[edit]

French Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fr

Etymology[edit]

From Grecs (Greeks) +‎ du (of the) +‎ roi (king).

Pronunciation[edit]

Proper noun[edit]

Grecs du roi m

  1. Grecs du roi