Audi has created a small - medium -
large styling language for its cars, with the 2015 A6 squarely in «medium» territory between the smaller A4 and larger A8.
Not exact matches
Stretched over a
large footprint - it's over five metres long and only 22 mm short of two metres wide - the Atlas's chunky
styling should come as no great shock to anyone familiar with Volkswagen's current design
language, with uncomplicated lines and simple details the order of the day.
Styling is an evolution of the company's current design
language and the early image suggests a shape very much like the
larger LS luxury saloon, with slim headlights and a predictably dramatic interpretation of the firm's «spindle» grille design.
Styling elsewhere is very much of the current Renault design
language, from its prominent grille and
large Renault badge, to the curvy rump and C - shaped daytime running lights.
Dynamic design
language: firmer design and
larger wheels Sporty and precise with a clear design — new and yet familiar: The appearance of the Cayenne has been enhanced in the
style that runs through the Porsche Design DNA.
The new
styling themes introduced with the S concept have been continued with the Jade and evolves Honda's family design
language with a new headlight and grille design, as well as a sporty bumper and some fresh
large alloys.
Available in the LS 460, the LS 460 L, and the LS 460 F Sport, the LS line is getting the attention it deserves, thanks in
large part to a new
styling language that made its debut on the 2013 model.
Wrapped in a conservative new sedan -
styled body — though with the convenience and uniqueness of a
large rear liftback (a la Octavia and Superb)-- introduces a crisp, clean new Skoda design
language.
The rectangular, three
large lower air intakes and the headlights fit in with Benz» latest
styling language.
Work on the
large scale (structure, voice) and small scale (
style and
language choices) to get your story ready for the world.
The improvements included using
larger fonts, lists, headers, white space, simple
language, and logical organization.29 In a study of voter behavior, Reilly and Richey found that increasing
language complexity on ballots made voters more likely to skip ballot questions.30 Rogers and Brown found that subjects who received «high - impact» instructions complied with those instructions at a significantly higher rate than the group that received instructions in the «low - impact»
style.31 Finally, McGlone and Tofighbakhsh found that readers presented with two phrases with identical meaning more readily accepted and believed the version of the phrase that rhymed.