ligature

created by root
(thing) by chromaticblue (3.9 y) (print)   (I like it!) Sun Oct 08 2000 at 19:14:54
A thin ring of metal or leather that binds a reed of a woodwind instrument to the mouthpiece.
(thing) by Gritchka (2.6 y) (print)   (I like it!) 3 C!s Sun Apr 15 2001 at 13:56:39
I don't at all understand that business about Unicode (later - oh, that writeup's been removed), so I'd better write down what I do understand. Ligatures and digraphs are letters. A diphthong (sic, not dipthong) is a sound.

A digraph consists of two separate letters, like SH or TH or CH or EA or OI or OU or AE, that represent a single sound.

A ligature consists of two letters joined together, either in handwriting or in print. The two ligatures I can write here are æ and œ. (And I can't even guarantee that your browser will show œ or oe as joined up.) These are relatively rare, of course.

There are five ligatures in a normal typeface. Any properly printed book will show the combinations ff, fi, fl, ffi, and ffl as fused. They are a single piece of type. There is no dot on the i in the combinations fi and ffi. (I have an idea some superior word-processors can now manage to do this. - ariels mentions that LaTeX can.)

German has a word Sauerstoffflaschen 'oxygen flask' which uniquely contains a group fffl, representing a problem for type-designers. Thanks to FordPrefect for this bit of trivia, and see that node for a solution.

Some fancier typefaces have ligatures for ct, st, and ss, with an elegant loop joining the two.

The German eszet symbol ß (ß) apparently derives from a ligature sz. (The modern eszet represents ss, and looks like it comes from ss - but in the old Fraktur or Black Letter type it's clearer that it's s + z, i.e. es + zet.) Possibly it was originally a ligature of long s and round s and was reinterpreted in Fraktur.

A Black Letter capital F looks like lower-case ff: see that node for how this has caused some surnames to be written as e.g. ffrench or ffoulkes.

A diphthong is a combination of two vowel sounds, as distinct from a pure unchanging vowel. In a phonetic script it is natural to represent a diphthong with a digraph; for example English OI in 'boil'. This consists of an O sound followed by an I sound. But because of the history of English over a thousand years, you often get single vowel letters represent diphthongs (as in 'go'), and digraphs representing simple vowels (as in 'wood').

(definition) by Webster 1913 (print) Wed Dec 22 1999 at 0:52:48

Lig"a*ture (?), n. [L. ligatura, fr. ligare, ligatum, to bind: cf. f. ligature. Cf. Ally, League, Legatura, Liable, Legament.]

1.

The act of binding.

2.

Anything that binds; a band or bandage.

3. Surg. (a)

A thread or string for tying the blood vessels, particularly the arteries, to prevent hemorrhage.

(b)

A thread or wire used to remove tumors, etc.

4.

The state of being bound or stiffened; stiffness; as, the ligature of a joint.

5.

Impotence caused by magic or charms.

[Obs.]

6. Mus.

A curve or line connecting notes; a slur.

7. Print.

A double character, or a type consisting of two or more letters or characters united, as ae, fi, ffl.

 

© Webster 1913.


Lig"a*ture (?), v. t. Surg.

To ligate; to tie.

 

© Webster 1913.

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