Word of the Day

: July 12, 2015

majuscule

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noun MAJ-uh-skyool

What It Means

: a large letter (such as a capital)

majuscule in Context

I can always recognize my brother's handwriting at a quick glance based on how elaborately the majuscules are formed and how they dwarf the other letters.

"But it's hard to begrudge Souza his glittering life, in large part because no one seems more innocently awed by it all than the man himself. (Consider the euphoric hashtags, such as … #sobeautiful, and the all-caps captions that he favors; in Souza's world, nearly everything merits majuscules.)" - Robert Haskell, Condé Nast Traveler, March 2015


Did You Know?

Majuscule looks like the complement to minuscule, and the resemblance is no coincidence. Minuscule appeared in the early 18th century as a word for a lowercase letter, then later as the word for certain ancient and medieval writing styles which had "small forms." Minuscule then acquired a more general adjectival use for anything very small. Majuscule is the counterpart to minuscule when it comes to letters, but it never developed a broader sense (despite the fact that its Latin ancestor majusculus has the broad meaning "rather large"). The adjective majuscule also exists (as does majuscular). Not surprisingly, the adjective shares the noun's specificity, referring only to large letters or to a style using such letters.



Test Your Vocabulary

What 6-letter word beginning with "u" is the name for a type of handwriting used in manuscripts of the 4th to 8th centuries A.D. and made with rounded, separated majuscules? The answer is …


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