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- [Voiceover] Hello, grammarians. Hello, Paige. - [Voiceover] Hi, David. - [Voiceover] So, Paige, have you ever heard of this man Aldus Manutius? - [Voiceover] I don't think I have. That's a pretty cool name, though. - [Voiceover] His given name was actually Aldo Manuzio. He was a Venetian printer around 1500. And this guy invented the italic typeface. - [Voiceover] What? - [Voiceover] Yeah. So, italic is this word that really just comes from Italy, right, so he's from Venice, which is in modern day Italy. And what it refers to is text that is kind of on its side, so like this. Kind of slopes to the right. That's italic. And he was one of the first printers, so he had this movable type printing machine, this press. And he developed these letters. He cut them into pieces of metal and he developed this kind of slanted style. And today we call this the italic typeface. - [Voiceover] Wow! - [Voiceover] Actually, technically, we'd call this the italic script, because it's based on an earli...