Underline

Underline
Underlined text.

An underline, also called an underscore,[1] is one or more horizontal lines immediately below a portion of writing. Single, and occasionally double ("double-underscore"), underlining was originally used in hand-written or typewritten documents to emphasise text. In a manuscript to be typeset, various forms of underlining were conventionally used to indicate that text should be set in a special typeface such as italics to show emphasis, part of a procedure known as markup. With the advent of word processing, different typefaces can be used in the manuscript directly, so that underlining is no longer needed for markup; but underlining is sometimes used in documents in its own right.

Underlines are sometimes used as a diacritic, to indicate that a letter has a different pronunciation to its non-underlined form.

Contents

Use with computers

In web browsers, default settings typically distinguish hyperlinks by underlining them (and usually changing their color), but both users and websites can change these settings to make some or all hyperlinks appear differently (or even without distinction from normal text).

HTML and CSS

The HTML special inline element <ins>, denoting inserted text, is often presented as underlined text. HTML also has a presentational element <u>, denoting underlined text; this is deprecated in favour of the CSS style {text-decoration: underline}. These elements may also exist in other markup languages, such as MediaWiki; the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) provides an extensive selection of related elements for marking editorial activity (insertion, deletion, correction, addition, etc.).

On Wikis

To underline text on a Mediawiki-server (e.g. Wikipedia) page, CSS can be used, and it is also possible to simply enclose with its HTML-tags: <u> to open and then </u> to cease underlining.[2]

Unicode

Unicode has the combining diacritic "combining low line" at U+0332  ̲ that results in an underline when run together: u̲n̲d̲e̲r̲l̲i̲n̲e̲. Not to be confused is the combining macron below.

"Simulated" underlines in plaintext

In plain-text (ASCII) computer files, including plain-text e-mails, where underlining is not possible, it is often indicated by surrounding words with underscore characters. For example, "You must use an _emulsion_ paint on the ceiling".

Underline (typically red or wavy or both) is often used by spell checkers (and grammar checkers) to denote misspelled or otherwise incorrect text.

Underlines in non-Latin scripts

In Chinese, the underline is a punctuation mark for proper names (專名號, 专名号; pinyin: zhuānmínghào; literally “proper name mark”, used for personal and geographic names). Its meaning is somewhat akin to capitalization in English and should never be used for emphasis; however, due to the influence of English computing, the underline is now sometimes used for emphasis. A wavy underline (書名號, 书名号; pinyin: shūmínghào; literally “book title mark”) serves a similar function, but marks names of literary works instead of proper names.

In the case of two or more adjacent proper names, each individual proper name is separately underlined, so there should be a slight gap between the underlining of each proper name.

Manuscripts

The following kinds of underlines are used on manuscripts to indicate special typefaces to be used.

  • single underline for italic type
  • double underline for small caps
  • triple underline for full capital letters (used among small caps or to change text already typed as lower case)
  • wavy underline for boldface

Notes

See also


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Underline — Un der*line , v. t. 1. To mark a line below, as words; to underscore. [1913 Webster] 2. To influence secretly. [Obs.] Sir H. Wotton. [1913 Webster] 3. Emphasize or call attention to; highlight; as, Long waits at the emergency room underline the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • underline — index insist, reaffirm Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • underline — (v.) 1721, from UNDER (Cf. under) + LINE (Cf. line) (v.). Cf. Du. onderlijnen. Related: Underlined; underlining. The noun is attested from 1888 …   Etymology dictionary

  • underline — (izg. ànderlajn) m DEFINICIJA inform. naredba u računalnim programima za prikaz podvučenih slova, usp. italic (2), bold (2) ETIMOLOGIJA engl …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • underline — [v] emphasize; mark accentuate, bracket, call attention to, caption, check off, draw attention to, feature, give emphasis, highlight, indicate, interlineate, italicize, play up, point to, point up, rule, stress, underscore; concepts 49,79 …   New thesaurus

  • underline — ► VERB 1) draw a line under (a word or phrase) to give emphasis or indicate special type. 2) emphasize. ► NOUN ▪ a line drawn under a word or phrase …   English terms dictionary

  • underline — [un′dər līn΄; ] also, for v. [, un΄dər līn′] vt. underlined, underlining 1. to draw a line beneath; underscore 2. to stress or emphasize n. a line underneath, as an underscore …   English World dictionary

  • underline — 01. His failing mark on the midterm only [underlines] his need for extra help. 02. The students were required to give a simple definition for the [underlined] words in the text. 03. I have [underlined] grammar mistakes in your writing for you to… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • underline */*/ — UK [ˌʌndə(r)ˈlaɪn] / US [ˌʌndərˈlaɪn] verb [transitive] Word forms underline : present tense I/you/we/they underline he/she/it underlines present participle underlining past tense underlined past participle underlined 1) a) to show clearly that… …   English dictionary

  • underline — (also underscore esp. in AmE) verb 1 draw a line under a word ADVERB ▪ heavily ▪ The word ‘not’ was heavily underlined. 2 emphasize sth ADVERB ▪ clearly ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

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