Adobe
Across
- 4. allowing words in your paragraph to be hyphenated to help with the flow of your lines; you can also set guidelines for these to limit how many words can be hyphenated in a paragraph and where the hyphen is inserted in a word
- 5. used for print only, extra space in addition to your page size that’s cut off when artwork “bleeds” to the edge of the page, so you don’t have any white border
- 7. any horizontal lines used as a divider and printed on the page
- 9. regulations for where line breaks can occur, so you can avoid widows / orphans and keep a certain number of lines in a paragraph together at all times
- 16. a typographical term for the spacing of letters
- 18. when the amount of text in your text box is more than the size of your frame and overflows into a second text box
- 19. a group of notes shown at the end of an entire document that each refers to a reference number made in the text
- 24. a note shown at the bottom of a page that refers to a reference number made on that same page in the text
- 25. mini templates you can create and use throughout your document for pages that have repeated content on them, like a page number or footer
- 27. the thin colored lines on your IND document that do not appear on your final document, but are just used for aligning objects on your page or showing where the margins are placed
- 28. every character in a typeface, (e.g: G, $, ?, 7), is represented by a glyph; this includes all capital and lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols
- 29. alignment of either one or both edges of your text to either left, right, center, left justify, right justify, center justify, or full justify
- 31. large initial capital letter, often used to set off the first paragraph of an article. - insert tab
- 32. extra space on the outside of your document, different from bleed, used to show markings or notes for the printer
- 33. the negative space around the inside of a page, a safe zone for all content / text / images
- 34. is adding white to a color to make it lighter
- 35. the command center for modifying paragraphs or blocks of text
Down
- 1. any horizontal line used as a divider and printed on the page
- 2. the invisible box that an object, link or text is contained within
- 3. when a paragraph is cut off and the remainder is bumped (or reflowed) to the next line
- 6. a small section of text pulled out and quoted in a larger font size;used to draw attention
- 8. adjusts the space between any two letters while tracking affects the spacing for more than two letters
- 10. refers to the transparency of a color
- 11. a single word left by itself on a line of text at the end of a paragraph, or a single line of a paragraph left on a page by itself at the beginning or end of the paragraph
- 12. a pre-set of settings and formatting that can be applied to a word, a line of text, or an entire paragraph in one click
- 13. when any part of a text box is cut off and the remainder is bumped (or reflowed) to the next text box / frame
- 14. when a section of text is cut off and the remainder is bumped (or reflowed) to the next page
- 15. a chart of data or information organized in cells on a grid; tables can have their own set of styles, similar to character and paragraph styles
- 17. the label at the top or bottom of a page in a book, magazine, or other long-form document that could include things like the name of the publication and/or the chapter or section name, the author's name, a website or copyright line, etc.; usually appears next to the page number
- 20. order in which you work in a program as you’re designing a project
- 21. a new window that opens for you to edit copy without seeing all the formatting; mainly for convenience if the style of text is making copyediting difficult for you; it does show symbols for all breaks, indents, and tabs
- 22. a type of grid with parallel or horizontal lines that is useful when creating negative space in a design
- 23. a pull quote or other sidebar-type part of your layout that is separate from your body text
- 26. an outside file (separate from your IND file) that is placed in your IND document (for example: a JPG of an image, an EPS of a logo, or a even a PSD or AI file); this feature is what really brings the 3 main Adobe programs together to work seamlessly and expand your possibilities for design
- 30. two pages shown side-by-side, also known as a spread – used for documents that will be printed and bound