While isn't a standard retail font name you’ll find in a typical Adobe or Google library, it often refers to a specific "Complex Script" (CS) variant of the classic Arial typeface. These versions are engineered for high-end professional typesetting, particularly when dealing with multilingual layouts that require seamless integration between Latin and non-Latin characters.
If "Arial Body CS" is a proprietary variant, check Monotype or Linotype. While they primarily sell standard Arial, they sometimes offer "Text" or "Body" variants designed for long-form reading.
Because Arial is a proprietary Monotype typeface, advanced variants are often already included in premium operating system packages or enterprise software suites. Check your system's font book to see if , Arial Unicode MS , or specialized regional variants are already installed. Utilize Official Font Foundries
I tested the version (Variable TTF, optical size: Body) against Windows default Arial at 11pt on a 27" 4K display.
: The "CS" suffix refers to Complex Script support . This is a setting within Microsoft Office that applies specific font formatting to languages like Arabic, Hebrew, or Hindi, ensuring they display correctly alongside standard Latin text .
Arial is not freeware. It is distributed under commercial licenses via Microsoft Windows (pre-installed), macOS (as Arial.ttf), and Adobe Fonts.
If you cannot find the exact "Body CS" variant through official channels, several universally accessible, high-quality sans-serif fonts offer identical or superior legibility for body text:
Includes all necessary ligatures, accent marks, and currency symbols.