

Font Details Nameįutura Md BT Font Family (Includes Total 06 Types) You can make pairing this font with another sans-serif font like Liquido Font. You can also use this typeface for creating short and long-type paragraphs in any field.

This typeface is great for use in designing apps like Canvas and Adobe Photoshop. Many developers use this typeface for creating software development and website development purposes. It is also suitable for website design purposes. It is also suitable for creating quotes, articles, banner designs, advertisements, social media posts, and presentations. This font has a lot of similar families of fonts like Futura condensed medium font.

You can also use this typeface for creating logo designs, template designs, emblems, and so on. It has six styles and each style makes attractive and stylish shapes. You can use this font for creating different types of card designing purposes such as business cards, invitation cards, gift cards, and a lot more related fields. This allows the font vendor to do special handling of the mark combination when doing further processing without requiring larger contextual rules.In this portion, we are presenting all the usage and features of this typeface. In Arabic it might be preferred to combine the shadda with fatha (0x0651, 0x064E) into a ligature before processing shapes. These two glyphs can then be correctly placed using GPOS. To avoid multiple glyph variants to fit all base glyphs, the character is decomposed into two glyphs.a dot above and a dot below. In Syriac, the character 0x0732 is a combining mark that has a dot above AND a dot below the base character. The feature should be processed as the first feature processed, and should be processed only when it is called. This feature permits such composition/decompostion. Additionally, it may be preferable to compose two characters into a single glyph for better glyph processing. Function: To minimize the number of glyph alternates, it is sometimes desired to decompose a character into two glyphs.
