yes
There is no "tense" to the word bold, it is an adjective. "Tense" is placed on verbs not adjectives. What you are looking for is the proper tense of the term "to be". In this case: WAS bold, WERE bold, HAD BEEN bold, or HAS BEEN bold.
bold, intelligent, slightly cocky,
bold and strong
When he became PM
bold
If the following text shows as Bold, Italic, and Underlined then YES it can. [B]Bold[/B] [I]Italic[/I] [U]Underlined[/U] Well... No it can't
To make words bolded, type [b] text you want bolded [/b]. To make words underlined, type [u] text you want underlined[/u]. To make words italicized, type [i] text you want underlined [/i].
Bold, underlined and italic letters are all used as forms of emphasis.
signposts ~
No, they are just big and bold. You could of just looked at a newspaper yourself !
TEXT - Bold textTEXT - Italic textTEXT - Underlined textTEXT - Strike-out text:)
http://www.gmodelo.com.mx/default_internet_es.HTML grupo modelo is the name of the Mexican company that manufactures corona, don´t know which font exactly but hope this will help
No, form names are typically not underlined in most cases. It is more common to use bold text or a different color to emphasize the form name instead of underlining.
They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.They are normally underlined.
Headers
Headers
Black in typography is referring to a font weight heavier than bold, the most "fat" weight of the font you can have and often expressed in numbers as 75, whereas the bold would be a 65. For instance the font family Helvetica consists of several weights from Helvetica Light over Helvetica Roman and Helvetica Roman to Helvetica Black.