Dry-point

A pointed instrument without lead or ink, used for incising lines or strokes in parchment, or an adjective describing marks so made.

A pointed instrument without lead or ink, used for incising lines or strokes in parchment, or an adjective describing marks so made. Dry-point ruling was used before the Gothic period to guide the writing in a way that would be invisible to the reader. Dry-point glosses are also found, especially in Insular manuscripts. See also hardpoint.

  • French:
    Pointe sčche
  • Italian:
    Stilo, stiletto, punteruolo; Punta secca
  • Portuguese:
    ponta-seca
  • Spanish:
    Estilo; punzon; Punta seca

Raymond Clemens and Timothy Graham, Introduction to Manuscript Studies (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2007), 16-17.