Article ID: 114222
Article Last Modified on 1/12/2007
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Office Word 2007
- Microsoft Office Word 2003
- Microsoft Word 2002 Standard Edition
This article was previously published under Q114222
SUMMARY
The phrase "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetuer" appears in Microsoft Word online Help. This phrase has the appearance of an intelligent Latin idiom. Actually, it is nonsense.
MORE INFORMATION
Although the phrase is nonsense, it does have a long history. The phrase
has been used for several centuries by typographers to show the most
distinctive features of their fonts. It is used because the letters involved
and the letter spacing in those combinations reveal, at their best, the
weight, design, and other important features of the typeface.
A 1994 issue of "Before & After" magazine traces "Lorem ipsum ..." to a jumbled
Latin version of a passage from de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum, a treatise
on the theory of ethics written by Cicero in 45 B.C. The passage "Lorem
ipsum ..." is taken from text that reads, "Neque porro quisquam est qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci velit ...," which
translates as, "There is no one who loves pain itself, who seeks after it
and wants to have it, simply because it is pain..."
During the 1500s, a printer adapted Cicero's text to develop a page of type
samples. Since then, the Latin-like text has been the printing industry's
standard for fake, or dummy, text. Before electronic publishing, graphic
designers had to mock up layouts by drawing in squiggled lines to indicate
text. The advent of self-adhesive sheets preprinted with "Lorem ipsum" gave
a more realistic way to indicate where text would go on a page.
REFERENCES
"Before & After," Volume 4, issue 1.
"MicroNews," Volume 13, issue 19.
Additional query words: greek gibberish word6 inf wd2002 wd2003 wd2007
Keywords: kbhelp kbinfo kbinterop KB114222