Underlined masculine/feminine ordinal indicators
Hi,
I'm posting this here in the hope of bringing the following issue to the attention of the folks responsible for font development/design at Adobe (and perhaps other affiliated type foundries).
Most fonts have feminine and masculine ordinal indicators: ª and º (accessed at Alt-166 and Alt-167 respectively). They are used in Spanish and Portuguese, and perhaps other languages. While these characters are also used in other functions, they are mostly used as gender-specific ordinal indicators (2nd = 2ª or 2º, 3rd = 3ª or 3º and so on).
In Spanish and European Portuguese, AFAIK, these gender-specific ordinal indicators may or may not be underlined. In Brazilian Portuguese, they are supposed to be underlined.
When the underlined ordinal indicator is missing, the alternative most people use is to use the lower case "a" or "o", then underline and superscritp it. (You cannot simply underline the ordinal indicator, as that would result in a superscript "a" with the underline way below.) Another method would be to substitute the ordinal's font with a font that does have underlined ordinals. Whatever the method, these are not only time consuming, but they can also result in trouble when you need to export and otherwise manipulate the text. And obviously, they simply don't look good if you care about good typography.
While some Adobe fonts have them underlined (including Courier, Helvetica etc), most don't (Courier New, Times New Roman etc). Out of the fonts that came with InDesign CS3, only 5 typefaces have the underlined ordinals. Two of them are decorative (Brush Script Std and Giddyup Std) and three are monospaced (Letter Gothic Std, Orator Std and Prestige Elite Std). Of all 220 fonts I had installed with Adobe PageMaker 6.0, only ITC American Typewriter and ITC Cheltenham carry the underlined ordinal indicators.
Here is my suggestion: please add the underlined ordinal indicators to your fonts as you update them, even if it's only as a glyph, to allow users to opt as to whether underline or not these gender-specific ordinal indicators. Any thoughts and further suggestions are appreciated.
Thank you,
CB
