Minuscule
Minuscule or
lower case letters are the smaller form of
letter, as opposed to capital letters (i.e. lower case letters are
a,
b,
c,
d, etc).
Originally
alphabets were written entirely in
majuscule (capital) letters which were spaced between well-defined upper and lower bounds. When written quickly with a
pen, these tended to rounder and 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
carolingian minuscule, 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 majuscule and minuscule letters in a single text.
The word itself is often spelled
miniscule, by association with the unrelated word
miniature and the prefix
mini. This is traditionally regarded as a spelling mistake, but is now so common that dictionaries tend to accept it as a spelling variation. However,
miniscule is still less likely to be used for minuscule letters.
The term "lower case" comes from manual
typesetting. Since minuscules were more frequent in text than majuscules, typesetters often stored them on the lower shelf of a desk to keep them in easy reach.
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
18th 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 minuscule 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 minuscule 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 has also had minuscule letters, which makes it relatively unusual among
abjads, which—including
Hebrew,
Syriac and
Arabic—tend to be written without case.
In scripts with a
case distinction, minuscules are generally used in most texts, and for most of any given text, with majuscules reserved for emphasis and special contexts.
*
minuscule numeral*
Lowercase (music)