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Latetype

Latetype is a term used in typography and font metadata to denote typefaces that support the Latin script, the writing system used for most Western European languages. It typically includes the basic Latin alphabet along with diacritic marks found in many languages and may extend to Latin-based ligatures and symbols. The term is not consistently standardized and is often described using phrases such as Latin-script fonts, Latin-typefaces, or simply Latin fonts.

In font catalogs, digital asset pipelines, and font-management tools, latetype serves as a shorthand to separate

Latetype coverage generally aligns with Unicode Latin blocks, including Basic Latin and Latin Extended ranges. Font

The term is not a formal classification in standard typography references. It tends to appear in internal

See also: Latin script, Unicode, font metadata, script tagging, Latin Extended blocks.

Latin-script
fonts
from
those
designed
for
Cyrillic,
Greek,
or
non-Latin
scripts.
Rendering
engines
and
font-subsetting
processes
may
rely
on
script
tags
or
Unicode
coverage
information
to
determine
whether
a
font
can
render
Latin
characters.
metadata
may
annotate
latetype
support
to
indicate
which
Latin
characters,
diacritics,
ligatures,
and
punctuation
are
included,
informing
localization
and
typography
decisions.
datasets,
asset-management
contexts,
or
research
discussions
where
a
lightweight
label
for
Latin-script
capability
is
useful.