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Differences

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Escorial

Escorial

Touches
The upper-case 'Q' tail touches the circle.
None
The top of the upper-case 'A' has no serifs or cusps.
Top serif
The top stroke of the upper-case 'C' has a vertical or angled upward-pointing serif.
Upright
The strokes are upright.
U-shaped
The sides of the lower-case 'y' are parallel (U-shaped).
Both
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'W' has two separate serifs.
Serifs
The upper-case 'I' is a single stroke with serifs.
Double-storey
The lower-case 'z' is double-storey.
Open
The bowl of the '6' leaves a gap with the vertical.
Right
The ascender of the lower-case 'd' curves towards the right.

Note that the fonts in the icons shown above represent general examples, not necessarily the two fonts chosen for comparison.

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Bible Script

Bible Script

Open
The upper-case 'Q' tail forms part of the stroke of an open circle.
Left
The top of the upper-case 'A' has a serif or cusp on the left.
No top serif
The top stroke of the upper-case 'C' has no upward-pointing serif.
Right
The strokes are sloped right (italic, oblique, or cursive).
V-shaped
The sides of the lower-case 'y' are angled (V-shaped).
Left
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'W' has a single left-facing serif.
Stroke
The upper-case 'I' is a single stroke with no serifs.
Plain
The lower-case 'z' is single-storey without a bar.
Closed
The bowl of the '6' meets the vertical.
Straight
The ascender of the lower-case 'd' is straight.