Account Blog 2

Printers in the 1500s scrambled the words from Cicero’s “De Finibus Bonorum et Dolorem” after mixing the words in each sentence. They abbreviated the word Dolorem, which means pain, to the phrase lorem, which does not have an actual meaning.

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Account Blog 1

Printers in the 1500s scrambled the words from Cicero’s “De Finibus Bonorum et Dolorem” after mixing the words in each sentence. They abbreviated the word Dolorem, which means pain, to the phrase lorem, which does not have an actual meaning.

Read More »

Account Blog 2

Printers in the 1500s scrambled the words from Cicero’s “De Finibus Bonorum et Dolorem” after mixing the words in each sentence. They abbreviated the word Dolorem, which means pain, to the phrase lorem, which does not have an actual meaning.

Read More »

Account Blog 1

Printers in the 1500s scrambled the words from Cicero’s “De Finibus Bonorum et Dolorem” after mixing the words in each sentence. They abbreviated the word Dolorem, which means pain, to the phrase lorem, which does not have an actual meaning.

Read More »