I saw someone use \tfrac in one of their documents.
\text{young children are often taught } \tfrac 18 \text{ is } \tfrac 12 \text{ of } \tfrac 14
As two examples of what I am looking for, we have:
quadcould be written asspazio quadratone
dfracisdisplay fraction
So... tfrac is... what exactly? ... In one of the languages English, French, Italian, German, etc...

text fractionperhaps? – LaTeXereXeTaL May 01 '23 at 21:52\tfrac{1}{8}not\tfrac18(although that does unfortunately work) – David Carlisle May 01 '23 at 22:29amsmathmanualamsldoc.pdfalready explains: The amsmath package provides also \dfrac and \tfrac as convenient abbreviations for{\displaystyle\frac ... }and{\textstyle\frac ... }. And before you're asking\genfracis generalized fraction (see section 4.11.3 of the amsmath manual). – cabohah May 02 '23 at 06:54