Dictionary Definition
lowercase adj : relating to small (not
capitalized) letters that were kept in the lower half of a
compositor's type case; "lowercase letters; a and b and c etc"
[ant: uppercase]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Alternative spelling of lower case.
Translations
- Finnish: pienaakkoset p, pienet kirjaimet p
Adjective
- Written in lower case.
Translations
- Finnish: pienillä kirjaimilla kirjoitettu
Alternative spellings
Extensive Definition
Lower case or lowercase or minuscule letters are
the smaller form of letters,
as opposed to capital
letters: for example, the letter "a" is lower case while the
letter "A" is a capital.
Originally alphabets were written entirely
in capital letters, spaced between well-defined upper and lower
bounds. When written quickly with a pen, these tended to turn into
rounder and much simpler forms, like uncials. It is from these that
the first minuscule hands developed, the half-uncials
and cursive minuscule, which no longer stay bound between a pair of
lines.
These in turn formed the foundations for the
Carolingian
minuscule script, developed by Alcuin for use in
the court of Charlemagne,
which quickly spread across Europe. Here for the first time it
became common to mix both upper and lower case letters in a single
text.
The term "lower case" comes from manual typesetting. Since
minuscules were more frequent in text than majuscules, typesetters
placed them in the lower and nearer type case,
while the case with the majuscules (the "upper case") was above and
behind, a longer reach.
The word minuscule is often spelled miniscule, by
association with the unrelated word miniature and the prefix mini.
This has traditionally been regarded as a spelling mistake (since
minuscule is derived from the word minus), but is now so common
that some dictionaries tend to accept
it as a spelling variation. However, miniscule is still less likely
to be used for lower-case letters.
History
Traditionally, "more important" letters—those beginning sentences or nouns—were made larger; then they were written in a different script, although there was no fixed capitalization system until the early eighteenth century (and even then all nouns were capitalized, a system still followed in German but not in English).Similar developments have taken place in other
alphabets. The lower-case script for the Greek
alphabet has its origins in the seventh century and acquired
its quadrilinear
form in the eighth century. Over time, uncial letter forms were
increasingly mixed into the script. The earliest dated Greek
lower-case text is the Uspenski
Gospels (MS 461) in the year 835. The modern practice of
capitalizing every sentence seems to be imported (and is commonly
not used when printing Ancient Greek materials even today).
The Samaritan
alphabet also had lower-case letters, making it relatively
unusual among abjads such
as Hebrew,
Syriac
and Arabic,
which tend to be written without case.
Usage
In scripts with a case distinction, the lower case is generally used in most texts, and for most of any given text, with the upper case reserved for emphasis and special contexts.References
See also
External links
- Lower Case Definition by The Linux Information Project; also includes information on lower case as it relates to computers.
lowercase in Tosk Albanian: Minuskel
lowercase in Belarusian: Мінускул
lowercase in Catalan: Minúscula
lowercase in Czech: Minuskule
lowercase in Danish: Minuskel
lowercase in German: Minuskel
lowercase in Spanish: Minúscula
lowercase in Esperanto: Minusklo
lowercase in French: Bas-de-casse
lowercase in Galician: Minúscula
lowercase in Italian: Minuscolo
lowercase in Dutch: Onderkast
lowercase in Japanese: 小文字
lowercase in Norwegian: Minuskel
lowercase in Norwegian Nynorsk: Minuskel
lowercase in Polish: Minuskuła
lowercase in Portuguese: Minúscula
lowercase in Russian: Минускул
lowercase in Finnish: Pienaakkonen
lowercase in Swedish: Gemen
lowercase in Ukrainian: Мінускул
lowercase in Chinese: 小寫字母