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English quotation marks | |||||
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Quotation marks [A] are punctuation marks used in pairs in various writing systems to identify direct speech, a quotation, or a phrase. The pair consists of an opening quotation mark and a closing quotation mark, which may or may not be the same glyph. [3] Quotation marks have a variety of forms in different languages and in different media.
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The single quotation mark is traced to Ancient Greek practice, adopted and adapted by monastic copyists. Isidore of Seville, in his seventh century encyclopedia, Etymologiae , described their use of the Greek diplé (a chevron):
[13] ⟩ Diplé. Our copyists place this sign in the books of the people of the Church, to separate or to indicate the quotations drawn from the Holy Scriptures. |
The double quotation mark derives from a marginal notation used in fifteenth-century manuscript annotations to indicate a passage of particular importance (not necessarily a quotation); the notation was placed in the outside margin of the page and was repeated alongside each line of the passage. [6] In his edition of the works of Aristotle, which appeared in 1483 or 1484, the Milanese Renaissance humanist Francesco Filelfo marked literal and appropriate quotes with oblique double dashes on the left margin of each line. [7] Until then, literal quotations had been highlighted or not at the author's discretion. [7] Non-verbal loans[ clarification needed ] were marked on the edge. After the publication of Filelfo's edition, the quotation marks for literal quotations prevailed. [7] During the seventeenth century this treatment became specific to quoted material, and it grew common, especially in Britain, to print quotation marks (now in the modern opening and closing forms) at the beginning and end of the quotation as well as in the margin; the French usage is a remnant of this. In most other languages, including English, the marginal marks dropped out of use in the last years of the eighteenth century. The usage of a pair of marks, opening and closing, at the level of lower case letters was generalized. [6]
By the nineteenth century, the design and usage began to be specific to each region. In Western Europe the custom became to use the quotation mark pairs with the convexity of each mark aimed outward. In Britain those marks were elevated to the same height as the top of capital letters: “...”.
In France, by the end of the nineteenth century, the marks were modified to an angular shape: «...». Some authors [8] claim that the reason for this was a practical one, in order to get a character that was clearly distinguishable from the apostrophes, the commas, and the parentheses. Also, in other scripts, the angular quotation marks are distinguishable from other punctuation characters: the Greek breathing marks, the Armenian emphasis and apostrophe, the Arabic comma, the decimal separator, the thousands separator, etc. Other authors [8] claim that the reason for this was an aesthetic one: the elevated quotation marks created extra white space before and after the word, below the quotation marks. This was considered aesthetically unpleasing, while the in-line quotation marks helped to maintain the typographical color, since the quotation marks had the same height and were aligned with the lower case letters. [6] Nevertheless, while other languages do not insert spaces between the quotation marks and the word(s) quoted, the French usage does insert them, even if they are narrow spaces.
The curved quotation marks ("66–99") usage, “...”, was exported to some non-Latin scripts, notably where there was some English influence, for instance in Native American scripts and Indic scripts. [9] [10] On the other hand, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic and Ethiopic adopted the French "angular" quotation marks, «...». The Far East angle bracket quotation marks, 《...》, are also a development of the in-line angular quotation marks.[ citation needed ]
In Central Europe, the practice was to use the quotation mark pairs with the convexity aimed inward. The German tradition preferred the curved quotation marks, the first one at the level of the commas, the second one at the level of the apostrophes: „...“. Alternatively, these marks could be angular and in-line with lower case letters, but still pointing inward: »...«. Some neighboring regions adopted the German curved marks tradition with lower–upper alignment, while some, e.g. Poland, adopted a variant with the convexity of the closing mark aimed rightward like the opening one, „...”.[ citation needed ]
Sweden (and Finland) choose a convention where the convexity of both marks was aimed to the right but lined up both at the top level: ”...”.[ citation needed ]
In Eastern Europe,[ clarification needed ] there was hesitation between the French tradition «...» and the German tradition „...“.[ citation needed ] The French tradition prevailed in Eastern Europe (Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus), whereas the German tradition, or its modified version with the convexity of the closing mark aimed rightward, has become dominant in Southeastern Europe, e.g. in the Balkan countries.[ citation needed ] In Romania the: „...” version is officially recognized by the Romanian Academy.[ citation needed ]
The reemergence of single quotation marks, ‘...’, around 1800 came about as a means of indicating a secondary level of quotation.[ citation needed ] In some languages using the angular quotation marks, the usage of the single guillemet, ‹...›, became obsolete, being replaced by double curved ones: “...”, though the single ones still survive, for instance, in Switzerland. In Russia, Ukraine and Belarus, the curved quotation marks, „...“, are used as a secondary level or in handwriting, while the angular marks, «...», are used as the primary level on printed text.[ citation needed ]
In English writing, quotation marks are placed in pairs around a word or phrase to indicate:
In American writing, quotation marks are normally the double kind (the primary style). If quotation marks are used inside another pair of quotation marks, then single quotation marks are used. For example: "Didn't she say 'I like red best' when I asked her wine preferences?" he asked his guests. If another set of quotation marks is nested inside single quotation marks, double quotation marks are used again, and they continue to alternate as necessary (though this is rarely done).
British publishing is regarded as more flexible about whether double or single quotation marks should be used. [11] A tendency to use single quotation marks in British writing is thought to have arisen after the mid-19th century invention of steam-powered presses and the consequent rise of London and New York as distinct, industrialized publishing centers whose publishing houses adhered to separate norms. [12] The King's English in 1908 noted that the prevailing British practice was to use double marks for most purposes, and single ones for quotations within quotations. [13] Different media now follow different conventions in the United Kingdom.
Different varieties and styles of English have different conventions regarding whether terminal punctuation should be written inside or outside the quotation marks. North American printing usually puts full stops and commas (but not colons, semicolons, exclamation or question marks) inside the closing quotation mark, whether it is part of the original quoted material or not. [14] [15] Styles elsewhere vary widely and have different rationales for placing it inside or outside, often a matter of house style.
Regarding their appearance, there are two types of quotation marks:
The closing single quotation mark is identical in form to the apostrophe and similar to the prime symbol. The double quotation mark is identical to the ditto mark in English-language usage. It is also similar to—and often used to represent—the double prime symbol. These all serve different purposes.
Other languages have similar conventions to English, but use different symbols or different placement.
Language | Standard | Alternative | Spacing | Names | Notes & references | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Secondary | Primary | Secondary | ||||||
Afrikaans | “...” | ‘...’ | „...” | ‚...’ | [i] | aanhalingstekens (quotation) | |||
Albanian | „...“ | ‘...’ | thonjëza (quotes) | ||||||
Amharic | «...» | ‹...› | [18] [19] | “...” | ‘...’ | [19] | ትምህርተ ጥቅስ (timihirite t’ik’isi, quote) | ||
Arabic | «...» | “...” | optional | علامات تنصيص (ʻalāmāt tanṣīṣ, quotation marks) | [ii] | ||||
Armenian | «...» | չակերտներ (chakertner, quotation marks) | |||||||
Azerbaijani | “...” | "..." | „...“ | 0–1 pt | dırnaq işarəsi (fingernail mark) | ||||
Basque | «...» | “...” | [20] | “...” | ‘...’ | komatxkak | |||
Belarusian | «...» | „...“ | [21] | „...“ | |||||
Bosnian |
| ’...’ | „...“ | »...« |
| »...« is used only in printed media. | |||
Bulgarian | „...“ |
| [22] [iv] | «...» [iii] |
| [22] [iv] | кавички (kavichki) (or стандартни кавички , двойни кавички (standartni/dvoyni kavichki) for the main types of quotation marks (also called double quotation mark(s)), and единични кавички , вторични кавички (edinichni/vtorichni kavichki) for the secondary quotation marks (also called single quotation mark(s)). |
| |
Catalan | «...» | “...” | [iv] [v] | “...” | ‘...’ | [iv] | none |
| |
Chinese, simplified |
|
| [23] | 「⋯」 | 『⋯』 | Fullwidth form |
| ||
Chinese, traditional | [24] [25] | “⋯” | ‘⋯’ | Fullwidth form | |||||
Croatian | „...” | ‘...’ | [26] [27] | »...« | [26] |
| Guillemets are preferred in typography and printing. [28] | ||
Czech | „...“ | ‚...‘ | »...« | ›...‹ | uvozovky (introduce) | ||||
Danish |
|
| [29] |
| ’...’ | [30] |
| ||
Dutch | „...” | ‚...’ | [31] | “...” | ‘...’ |
|
| ||
English, UK | ‘...’ | “...” | [32] [viii] | “...” | ‘...’ | 1–2 pt | Quotation marks, double quotes, quotes, inverted commas, speech marks | Usage of single or double as primary varies across English varieties. | |
English, US; English, Canada | “...” | ‘...’ | [viii] | ||||||
Esperanto | “...” | ‘...’ | [ix] |
|
| citiloj (lit. quoting tools) | |||
Estonian | „...“ | «...» |
| ||||||
Filipino | “...” | ‘...’ | [33] [viii] | [33] | panipi | ||||
Finnish | ”...” | ’...’ | [34] | »...» | ’...’ | [34] | lainausmerkit (citation marks) | ||
French | « ... » | « ... » [a] | [iv] | ‹ ... › | [iv] | guillemets (William) | |||
“...” [d] | “...” | ‘...’ | none | ||||||
French, Switzerland [e] | «...» | ‹...› | |||||||
Galician | «...» | “...” | [35] | “...” | ‘...’ | [35] | |||
Georgian | „...“ | none | none | ბრჭყალები (brč’q’alebi, claws) | |||||
German | „...“ | ‚...‘ | »...« | ›...‹ |
| ||||
German, Switzerland; Swiss German [e] | «...» | ‹...› | „...“ | ‚...‘ | |||||
Greek | «...» | “...” | [38] [39] | εισαγωγικά (eisagogiká, introductory marks) | |||||
Hebrew | ”...„ | ’...‚ | [40] | "..." | '...' | מֵירְכָאוֹת (merkha'ot) | Not to be confused with גֵּרְשַׁיִם ( gershayim , double geresh typographical mark). [ii] | ||
Hindi | “...” | ‘...’ | [41] | उद्धरण चिह्न (uddharan chihn) | |||||
Hungarian | „...” | »...« | [iv] |
| The three levels of Hungarian quotation: „...»...’...’...«...” [42] | ||||
Icelandic | „...“ | ‚...‘ or | [43] | tilvitnunarmerki gæsalappir (‘goose feet’) | |||||
Ido | « ... » | ‘ ... ’ | cito-hoketi (quotation hooks) | ||||||
Indonesian | “...” | ‘...’ | [44] | ”...” | ’...’ | tanda kutip , tanda petik (quote mark) | Usage of alternative marks seen among the literature by Jehovah’s Witnesses in Indonesian. | ||
Interlingua | “...” | ‘...’ | [ix] | virgulettas (small commas) | |||||
Irish | “...” | ‘...’ | 1–2 pt | liamóg (William) | |||||
Italian | «...» | “...” | [45] | “...” | ‘...’ | [45] | virgolette (small commas) | ||
Italian, Switzerland [e] | «...» | ‹...› | |||||||
Japanese | Fullwidth form | Occasionally, other symbols, such as “...”, are used stylistically. Quotes are almost always preceded by particle と . | |||||||
Kazakh | «...» | “...” | тырнақша (tırnaqşa) | [46] | |||||
Karakalpak | «...» | “...” | tırnaqsha (tırnaqsha) | ||||||
Khmer | «...» | [f] | “...” | សញ្ញាសម្រង់ (saññā samráng, quotation mark) | |||||
Korean, North Korea | 《...》 | 〈...〉 | |||||||
Korean, South Korea | “...” [47] | ‘...’ [47] | 『...』 [vi] | 「...」 [vi] | |||||
Lao | “...” | ວົງຢືມ (vong yum) | |||||||
Latvian |
| «...» |
| There is no standardized way on how quotation marks used in Latvian, depending on several usages:
Historically, „...“ (German-stlye quotes) was used in Latvian in the first half of 20th century. | |||||
Lithuanian | „...“ | ‚...‘ [48] | kabutės | ||||||
Lojban | lu ... li’u | lu “...” li’u | Double quotes are not officially named in Lojban, but sometimes called lubu , following the same pattern as vowel letters, e.g. ⟨a⟩ = abu | Lojban uses the words lu and li’u , rather than punctuation, to surround quotes of grammatically correct Lojban. [49] Double quotes can also be used for aesthetic purposes. Non-Lojban text may be quoted using zoi . [50] | |||||
Macedonian | „...“ | ’...‘ | [51] | [51] |
| ||||
Maltese | “...” | ‘...’ | Virgoletti | ||||||
Mongolian, Cyrillic script | «...» | „...“ | [iv] | „...“ | |||||
Mongolian, Mongolian script | ⟪...⟫ | ⟨...⟩ | [x] [52] | ||||||
New Tai Lue | 《...》 | 〈...〉 | [53] | ||||||
Norwegian | «...» | ‘...’ | [54] | „...“ | ,...‘ |
| |||
Occitan | «...» | “...” | “...” | «...» | guilheumets , verguetas | ||||
Pashto | «...» | [55] | [ii] | ||||||
Persian | «...» | گیومه (giyume, guillaume) | [ii] | ||||||
Polish | „...” | »...« | [iv] | «...» [xi] | ‘...’ [xii] | none | cudzysłów (someone else's word) | ||
Portuguese, Brazil | “...” | ‘...’ | [iv] |
| |||||
Portuguese, Portugal | «...» | “...” | [61] [iv] | “...” | ‘...’ | [61] | |||
Romanian | „...” | «...» | [62] [iv] | none | ghilimele (quotes) | ||||
Romansh [e] | «...» | ‹...› | |||||||
Russian | «...» | „...“ | [iv] | “...” | ‘...’ | none | |||
Serbian | „...” | ’...’ | [63] [iv] | „...“ | ‘...’ | [63] [iv] |
| ||
Scottish Gaelic | ‘...’ | “...” | “...” | ‘...’ | cromagan turrach | ||||
Slovak | „...“ | ‚...‘ | »...« | ›...‹ | úvodzovky (introduce) | ||||
Slovene | „...“ | ‚...‘ | »...« | ›...‹ | navednice | ||||
Sorbian | „...“ | ‚...‘ | |||||||
Spanish | «...» | “...” | [64] [iv] | “...” | ‘...’ | [iv] [v] |
| ||
Swedish | ”...” | ’...’ | [65] |
| ’...’ | [65] |
| ||
Tai Le | 《...》 | 〈...〉 | [66] | ||||||
Tamil | “...” | ‘...’ | [ citation needed ] | மேற்கோட்குறி (mErkoL kuri) | |||||
Tibetan | 《...》 | 〈...〉 | [67] | ||||||
Tigrinya | «...» | ‹...› | [19] | “...” | ‘...’ | [19] | |||
Thai | “...” | ‘...’ | อัญประกาศ (anyaprakat, differentiating mark), ฟันหนู (fạnh̄nū, mouse teeth) | ||||||
Turkish | “...” | ‘...’ | [68] | «...» | ‹...› | 0–1 pt | tırnak işareti (fingernail mark) | ||
Ukrainian | «...» |
| [69] | none | лапки (lapky, little paws) | ||||
Urdu | “...” | ‘...’ | [70] | واوین (wāwain) | [ii] | ||||
Uyghur | «...» | ‹...› | [71] | none |
| [ii] | |||
Uzbek | «...» | „...“ | [72] | „...“ | ‚...‘ | qoʻshtirnoq (nails) | |||
Vietnamese | “...” | [73] | « ... » | NBSP (optional) |
| ||||
Welsh | ‘...’ | “...” | “...” | ‘...’ | 1–2 pt | dyfynodau | |||
Contemporary Bulgarian employs the em dash or the quotation dash (the horizontal bar) followed by a space character at the beginning of each direct-speech segment by a different character in order to mark direct speech in prose and in most journalistic question and answer interviews; in such cases, the use of standard quotation marks is left for in-text citations or to mark the names of institutions, companies, and sometimes also brand or model names.[ citation needed ]
Air quotes are also widely used in face-to-face communication in contemporary Bulgarian but usually resemble " ... "
(secondary: ' ... '
) unlike written Bulgarian quotation marks.
You can help expand this section with text translated from the corresponding article in Dutch. (September 2013)Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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The standard form in the preceding table is taught in schools and used in handwriting. Most large newspapers have kept these low-high quotation marks, „ and ”; otherwise, the alternative form with single or double English-style quotes is now often the only form seen in printed matter. Neutral (straight) quotation marks, " and ', are used widely, especially in texts typed on computers and on websites. [74]
Although not generally common in the Netherlands any more, double angle (guillemet) quotation marks are still sometimes used in Belgium. Examples include the Flemish HUMO magazine and the Metro newspaper in Brussels. [75]
The symbol used as the left (typographical) quote in English is used as the right quote in Germany and Austria and a "low double comma" „ (not used in English) is used for the left quote. Its single quote form ‚ looks like a comma.
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description | Wrong Symbols |
---|---|---|---|---|
‚A‘ |
|
| German single quotes (left and right) |
|
„A“ |
|
| German double quotes (left and right) | " – neutral (vertical) double quotes (U+0022) |
Some fonts, e.g. Verdana, were not designed with the flexibility to use an English left quote as a German right quote. Such fonts are therefore typographically incompatible with this German usage.
Double quotes are standard for denoting speech in German.
This style of quoting is also used in Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, Georgian, Icelandic, Latvian, Lithuanian, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovak, Slovene and in Ukrainian. In Bulgarian, Icelandic, Estonian, Lithuanian, and Russian, single quotation marks are not used.[ clarification needed ]
Sometimes, especially in novels, guillemets (angled quotation marks) are used in Germany and Austria (but pointing in the opposite direction compared to French): »A ›B‹?«
In Switzerland, the French-style angle quotation mark sets are also used for German printed text: «A ‹B›?»
In Finnish and Swedish, right quotes, called citation marks, ”...”, are used to mark both the beginning and the end of a quote. Double right-pointing angular quotes, »...», can also be used.
Alternatively, an en-dash followed by a (non-breaking) space can be used to denote the beginning of quoted speech, in which case the end of the quotation is not specifically denoted (see section Quotation dash below). A line-break should not be allowed between the en-dash and the first word of the quotation.
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description |
---|---|---|---|
’A’ | U+2019 (8217) | ’ | Secondary level quotation |
”A” | U+201D (8221) | ” | Primary level quotation |
»A» | U+00BB (187) | » | Alternative primary level quotation |
– A | U+2013 (8211) | – | Alternative denotation at the beginning of quoted speech |
French uses angle quotation marks (guillemets, or duck-foot quotes), adding a 'quarter-em space' [a] within the quotes. With proper localization, computers automatically add the proper spacing. When localization is not available, many people use a non-breaking space between the quotation mark and the nearest word inside it[ citation needed ] because the difference between a non-breaking space and a four-per-em space is virtually imperceptible, many computer fonts do not include a quarter-em space, and the Unicode quarter-em space is breakable. Even more commonly, many people put a normal (breaking) space inside the quotation marks[ citation needed ] because the non-breaking space cannot be accessed easily from the keyboard, or because they are not aware of this typographical refinement. Using a breakable space of any kind often results in a quotation mark appearing alone at the beginning of a line, since the quotation mark is erroneously treated as an independent word.
French news sites such as Libération , Les Échos and Le Figaro do not add manual spacing, leaving it up to localization and the browser to space the guillemets properly.
Sample | Unicode (decimal) HTML | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Quote | Space | ||
« A » |
| U+00A0 (160) | French double angle quotes (left and right), legacy (approximative) spacing usual on the web, with normal (four per em) no-break space (justifying, thus inappropriate) |
« A » | U+202F (8239)   | French double angle quotes (left and right), correct spacing used by typographers, with narrow (six per em) non-breaking spaces, represented on the web using narrow no-break space | |
«A» | French double angle quotes (left and right) without space (not recommended in French) | ||
‹ A › |
| U+00A0 (160) | French single angle quotes (left and right), alternate form for embedded quotations, legacy (approximative) spacing usual on the web, with normal (four per em) no-break space (justifying, thus inappropriate) |
‹ A › | U+202F (8239)   | French single angle quotes (left and right), alternate form for embedded quotations, correct spacing used by typographers, with narrow (six per em) non-breaking spaces, represented on the web using narrow no-break space | |
‹A› | French single angle quotes (left and right) without space (not recommended in French) |
Initially, the French guillemets were not angle shaped but also used the comma (6/9) shape.[ citation needed ] They were different from English quotes because they were standing (like today's guillemets) on the baseline (like lowercase letters), not raised above it (like apostrophes and English quotation marks) or hanging below it (like commas). At the beginning of the nineteenth century, this shape evolved to look like (( small parentheses )). The angle shape was introduced later to make them easier to distinguish from apostrophes, commas and parentheses in handwritten manuscripts submitted to publishers. Unicode currently does not provide alternate codes for these 6/9 guillemets on the baseline, as they are considered to be form variants of guillemets, implemented in older French typography (such as the Didot font design). With this older style there was also not necessarily any distinction of shape between the opening and closing guillemets; both often pointed to the right (as today's French closing guillemets do).[ citation needed ]
In old-style printed books, when quotations span multiple lines of text (including multiple paragraphs), an additional closing quotation sign is traditionally used at the beginning of each line continuing a quotation; this right-pointing guillemet at the beginning of a line does not close the current quotation. This convention was consistently used from the beginning of the 19th century by most book printers, but is no longer in use today. Such insertion of continuation quotation marks was rigidly maintained, even at a word hyphenation break. Since these continuation marks are obsolete in French, there is no support for automatic insertion of continuation guillemets in HTML or CSS, nor in word-processors. Old-style typesetting is emulated by breaking up the final layout with manual line breaks, and inserting the quotation marks at line start, much like pointy brackets before quoted plain text e-mail:
Unlike English, French does not identify unquoted material within a quotation by using a second set of quotation marks. Compare:
For clarity, some newspapers put nested quoted material in italics:
The French Imprimerie nationale (cf. Lexique des règles typographiques en usage à l'Imprimerie nationale, presses de l'Imprimerie nationale, Paris, 2002) does not use different quotation marks for nesting quotes:
In this case, when there should be two adjacent opening or closing marks, only one is written:
The use of English quotation marks is increasing in French and usually follows English rules, for instance in situations when the keyboard or the software context doesn't allow the use of guillemets. The French news site L'Humanité uses straight quotation marks along with angle ones.
English quotes are also used sometimes for nested quotations:
But the most frequent convention used in printed books for nested quotations is to style them in italics. Single quotation marks are much more rarely used, and multiple levels of quotations using the same marks is often considered confusing for readers:
Further, running dialogue does not use quotation marks beyond the first sentence, as changes in speaker are indicated by a dash, as opposed to the English use of closing and re-opening the quotation. (For other languages employing dashes, see section Quotation dash below.) The dashes may be used entirely without quotation marks as well. In general, quotation marks are extended to encompass as much speech as possible, including not just unspoken text such as "he said" (as previously noted), but also as long as the conversion extends. The quotation marks end at the last word of spoken text (rather than extending to the end of the paragraph) when the final part is not spoken.
— Mais je vous parle, moi ! » s’écria le jeune homme exaspéré de ce mélange d’insolence et de bonnes manières, de convenance et de dédain. (Dumas, Les trois mousquetaires )
"I am not speaking to you, sir", he said.
Greek uses angled quotation marks ( εισαγωγικά – isagogiká):
and the quotation dash ( παύλα – pávla):
which translate to:
A closing quotation mark, », is added to the beginning of each new paragraph within a quotation.
When quotations are nested, the nested parts use English-style quotation marks, double and then (if necessary) single: «...“...‘...’...”...».[ citation needed ]
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description |
---|---|---|---|
«Α» |
|
| Greek first level double quotes ( εισαγωγικά ) |
― Α | U+2014 (8212) | — | Greek direct quotation em-dash |
According to current recommendation by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences the main Hungarian quotation marks are comma-shaped double quotation marks set on the base-line at the beginning of the quote and at apostrophe-height at the end of it for first level, („Quote”), reversed »French quotes« without space (the German tradition) for the second level, and thus the following nested quotation pattern emerges:
... and with third level:
In Hungarian linguistic tradition the meaning of a word is signified by uniform (unpaired) apostrophe-shaped quotation marks:
A quotation dash is also used, and is predominant in belletristic literature.
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description |
---|---|---|---|
„A” |
|
| Hungarian first level double quotes (left and right) |
»A« |
|
| Hungarian second level double quotes (left and right) |
’A’ | U+2019 (8217) | ’ | Hungarian unpaired quotes signifying "meaning of the preceding term" |
In Israel, the traditional practice in printing and handwriting is to use „low-high” quote marks. [40] Since the 2000s, the plain quotes have become more common.[ citation needed ] The 2013 revision of the SI-1452 standard for Hebrew keyboard, available since 2012 in Windows 8 and in desktop Linux systems, supports both systems, as does the Gboard keyboard for touchscreen devices.
Norwegian uses angled quotation marks ( Anførselstegn )
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description |
---|---|---|---|
«Α» |
|
|
This section's factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. The reason given is: The PN-83/P-55366 standard was withdrawn in 2014, according to Polish Wikipedia.(March 2024) |
According to current PN-83/P-55366 standard from 1983 (but not dictionaries, see below), Typesetting rules for composing Polish text (Zasady składania tekstów w języku polskim) one can use either „ordinary Polish quotes” or «French quotes» (without space) for first level, and ‚single Polish quotes’ or «French quotes» for second level, which gives three styles of nested quotes:
There is no space on the internal side of quote marks, with the exception of 1⁄4 firet (≈ 1⁄4 em) space between two quotation marks when there are no other characters between them (e.g. ,„ and ’”).
The above rules have not changed since at least the previous BN-76/7440-02 standard from 1976 and are probably much older.
These rules on the use of guillemets conflict with the ones given by Polish dictionaries, including the Wielki Słownik Ortograficzny PWN recommended by the Polish Language Council. The PWN rules state:
In specific uses, guillemets also appear. Guillemet marks pointing inwards are used for highlights and in case a quotation occurs inside a quotation. Guillemet marks pointing outwards are used for definitions (mainly in scientific publications and dictionaries), as well as for enclosing spoken lines and indirect speech, especially in poetic texts. [76]
In Polish printed books and publications, this dictionary-recommended style for guillemets (also known as »German quotes«) is used almost exclusively. In addition to being standard for second level quotes, guillemet quotes are sometimes used as first level quotes in headings and titles, but almost never for ordinary text in paragraphs.
Another style of quoting is to use an em-dash to open a quote; this is used almost exclusively for quoting dialogues rather than for single statements, and is virtually always the one used for that purpose in works of fiction.
— Jak się nazywa ta wieś, panie? — zapytał przybysz. Kowal wzruszył ramionami.
— Głupi Osioł.
— Głupi...?
— Osioł — powtórzył kowal takim tonem, jakby wyzywał gościa, żeby spróbował sobie z niego zażartować. Mag zamyślił się.
— Ta nazwa ma pewnie swoją historię — stwierdził w końcu. — W innych okolicznościach chętnie bym jej wysłuchał. Ale chciałbym porozmawiać z tobą, kowalu, o twoim synu.
The wizard bowed. A white cat that had been sleeping by the furnace woke up and watched him carefully.
“What is the name of this place, sir?” said the wizard.
The blacksmith shrugged.
“Stupid Donkey,” he said. [original English version is "Bad Ass", but that's not a common phrase in Polish]
“Stupid—?”
“Donkey,” repeated the blacksmith, his tone defying anyone to make something of it.
The wizard considered this.
“A name with a story behind it,” he said at last, “which were circumstances otherwise I would be pleased to hear. But I would like to speak to you, smith, about your son.”
An en-dash is sometimes used in place of the em-dash, especially so in newspaper texts.
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description |
---|---|---|---|
‚A’ |
|
| Polish single quotes (left and right) |
„A” |
|
| Polish double quotes (left and right) |
— A | U+2014 (8212) | — | Polish direct quotation em-dash |
– A | U+2013 (8211) | – | Polish direct quotation en-dash |
Neither the Portuguese language regulator nor the Brazilian prescribe a particular shape for quotation marks, they only prescribe when and how they should be used.
In Portugal, angular quotation marks [56] [61] (ex. «quote») are traditionally used. They are the Latin tradition quotation marks, normally used by typographers, and are also the usual style in reference sources, [60] [77] [78] as well as on some websites dedicated to the Portuguese language. [79]
The Código de Redação [80] for Portuguese-language documents published in the European Union prescribes three levels of quotation marks, «...“...‘...’...”...»:
The usage of curved quotation marks (ex. “quote” and ‘quote’) is growing in Portugal, [81] [ better source needed ] probably due to the omnipresence of the English language and to the corresponding difficulty (or even inability) to enter angular quotation marks on some machines (mobile phones, cash registers, calculators, etc.).
In Brazil, angular quotation marks are rare, and curved quotation marks (“quote” and ‘quote’) are almost always used. An example of this can be seen in the difference between a Portuguese keyboard (which has a key for « and ») and a Brazilian keyboard.
The Portuguese-speaking African countries tend to follow Portugal's conventions, not the Brazilian ones.
Other usages of quotation marks (“quote„ for double, ‹quote› for single) are obsolete in Portuguese.[ citation needed ].
In Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian, the angled quotation (Belarusian: «двукоссе», Russian: «кавычки», Ukrainian: «лапки») marks are used without spaces. In case of quoted material inside a quotation, rules and most noted style manuals prescribe the use of different kinds of quotation marks.
Example in Russian:
Пушкин писал Дельвигу: «Жду „Цыганов“ и тотчас тисну».
(Pushkin wrote to Delvig: "Waiting for 'Gypsies', and publish at once.")
Example in Ukrainian:
«І, звісно, не обійтись без користування словником. Один мій знайомий поет і літературознавець якось жартуючи сказав: “Я волію читати словники, ніж поеми. У словнику ті самі слова, що і в поемі, але подані в систематизованому порядку”. Це сказано жартома, але “читати словники” — не така вже дивовижна і дивацька річ, як може здатися».
("And, of course, you can't avoid using a dictionary. One of my acquaintances, a poet and literary critic, once jokingly said: 'I prefer to read dictionaries than poems. The dictionary has the same words as in the poem, but is presented in a systematic way'. It's a joke, but 'reading dictionaries' is not as amazing and bizarre as it may seem.")
Spanish uses angled quotation marks (comillas latinas or angulares), with no space between the quotation mark and the quoted material.
When quotations are nested in more levels than inner and outer quotation, the system is: [82]
The use of English quotation marks is increasing in Spanish;[ citation needed ] the El País style guide, which is widely followed in Spain, recommends them. Hispanic Americans often use them, owing to influence from the United States.
Corner brackets are well-suited for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean languages, because they accommodate vertical and horizontal writing equally well. China, South Korea, and Japan all use corner brackets when writing vertically. Usage differs when writing horizontally:
When corner brackets are being used for quotations, quote-within-quote segments are marked with white corner brackets.
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | Description | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
「文字」 |
| Corner brackets |
|
﹁文字﹂ |
| For vertical writing:
| |
『文字』 |
| White corner brackets
|
|
﹃文字﹄ | U+FE43 (65091), U+FE44 (65092) (non-normative) [b] | For vertical writing:
| |
“한” |
| Double quotation marks
|
|
‘한’ |
| Single quotation marks
|
|
《한》 |
| Double angle brackets
|
|
〈한〉 |
| Single angle brackets
|
|
This section possibly contains original research .(June 2021) |
Another typographical style is to omit quotation marks for lines of dialogue, replacing them with an initial dash, as in lines from James Joyce's Ulysses :
This style is particularly common in Bulgarian, French, Greek, Hungarian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, and Vietnamese. [73] James Joyce always insisted on this style, although his publishers did not always respect his preference. Alan Paton used this style in Cry, the Beloved Country (and no quotation marks at all in some of his later work). Charles Frazier used this style for his novel Cold Mountain as well. Details for individual languages are given above.
The dash is often combined with ordinary quotation marks. For example, in French, a guillemet may be used to initiate running speech, with a dash to indicate each change in speaker and a closing guillemet to mark the end of the quotation.
Dashes are also used in many modern English novels, especially those written in nonstandard dialects. Some examples include:
In Italian, Catalan, Portuguese, Spanish, Ukrainian, Russian, Polish, Bulgarian, Georgian, Romanian, Lithuanian and Hungarian, a reporting clause in the middle of a quotation is marked by a dash on each side of it. The initial quotation dash is followed by a single space, and any other quotation dashes in the same paragraph have a single space on each side. A Russian example:
― Хорош! ― смеясь, сказал Степан Аркадьевич, ― а меня же называешь нигилистом! Однако ведь это нельзя. Тебе надо говеть.
"Oh dear!" exclaimed Levin. "I think it is nine years since I went to communion! I haven't thought about it."
"You are a good one!" remarked Oblonsky, laughing. "And you call me a Nihilist! But it won't do, you know; you must confess and receive the sacrament."
A Hungarian example:
"Well, they keep on the move, don't they?" said Ron. "Like us."
In Finnish, on the other hand, the beginning of a reporting clause is marked only by the punctuation already existing in the sentence, or (if there was none) by adding a comma. When a quote continues after the reporting clause, the clause ends with a comma, and the continuation begins with another dash: [84]
"You don't seem to be anything special," said Korkala almost sadly, "but there's no help to it."
– Frakki, älähti Huikari. – Missä on frakki?
– Räätälissä, sanoi Joonas rauhallisesti.
"Tailcoat", yelped Huikari. "Where is the tailcoat?"
The Unicode standard introduced a separate character U+2015―HORIZONTAL BAR to be used as a quotation dash. It may be the same length as an em-dash, which is often used instead. Some software will allow a line break after an ordinary em-dash, but prevent it after a quotation dash. Both are displayed in the following table.
Samples | Unicode (decimal) | HTML | Description |
---|---|---|---|
― A | U+2015 (8213) | ― | Quotation dash, also known as horizontal bar |
— A | U+2014 (8212) | — | Em-dash, an alternative to the quotation dash |
– A | U+2013 (8211) | – | En-dash, used instead of em-dash for quotation dash in some languages (e.g. Swedish) |
Different typefaces, character encodings and computer languages use various encodings and glyphs for quotation marks.
'Ambidextrous' or 'straight' quotation marks ' " were introduced on typewriters to minimise the number of keys on the keyboard, and were inherited by computer keyboards and character sets. The ASCII character set, which has been used on a wide variety of computers since the 1960s, contains the straight versions only (U+0027' APOSTROPHE and U+0022"QUOTATION MARK).
Many systems, such as the personal computers of the 1980s and early 1990s, actually drew these ASCII quotes like closing quotes on-screen and in printouts, so text would appear like this (approximately):
These same systems often drew the backtick (the free standing character U+0060` GRAVE ACCENT ) as an 'open quote' glyph (usually a mirror image so it still sloped in the direction of a grave accent). Using this character as the opening quote gave a typographic approximation of curved single quotes. Nothing similar was available for the double quote, so many people resorted to using two single quotes for double quotes, which would look approximately like the following:
The typesetting application TeX uses this convention for input files. The following is an example of TeX input which yields proper curly quotation marks.
``Good morning, Dave,<nowiki>''</nowiki> said HAL.
`Good morning, Dave,' said HAL.
The Unicode standard added codepoints for slanted or curved quotes (U+201C“LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK and U+201D”RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK, described further below), shown here for comparison:
The Unicode mapping for PostScript Standard Encoding preserves the typographic approximation convention by mapping its equivalent of ASCII grave and single-quote to the Unicode curly quotation mark characters.
On most keyboards, typographical quotation marks are absent.
When typewriter keyboards were designed, curved quotation marks were not implemented. Instead, to limit the number of characters (and keys) required, straight quotation marks were invented as a compromise. (In countries that use angled quotation marks, those were not implemented on typewriters either[ citation needed ].)
Early computer keyboards copied layouts that had been established by typewriter keyboards. Most computer keyboards do not have specific keys for curved quotation marks or angled quotation marks. This may also have to do with computer character sets:
In languages that use the curved “...” quotation marks, they are available [d] in:
In languages that use angular «...» quotation marks, they are available [d] in:
In languages that use the corner bracket 「...」 quotation marks, they are available [d] in:
In languages that use the angle bracket 《...》 [e] they are available in:
In languages that use the curved „...“ quotation marks, they are available [d] in:
In languages that use the curved „...” quotation marks, they are available [d] in:
In languages that use the curved ”...” quotation marks, they are available [d] in:
Historically, support for curved quotes was a problem in information technology, primarily because the widely used ASCII character set did not include a representation for them. [f]
The term "smart quotes", “...”, is from the name in several word processors of a function aimed this problem: automatically converting straight quotes typed by the user into curved quotes, the feature attempts to be "smart" enough to determine whether the punctuation marked opening or closing. Since curved quotes are the typographically correct ones,[ citation needed ] word processors have traditionally offered curved quotes to users (at minimum as available characters). Before Unicode was widely accepted and supported, this meant representing the curved quotes in whatever 8-bit encoding the software and underlying operating system was using. The character sets for Windows and Macintosh used two different pairs of values for curved quotes, while ISO 8859-1 (historically the default character set for the Unixes and older Linux systems) has no curved quotes, making cross-platform and -application compatibility difficult.
Performance by these "smart quotes" features was far from perfect overall (variance potential by e.g. subject matter, formatting/style convention, user typing habits). As many word processors (including Microsoft Word and OpenOffice.org) have the function enabled by default, users may not have realized that the ASCII-compatible straight quotes they were typing on their keyboards ended up as something different (conversely users could incorrectly assume its functioning in other applications, e.g. composing emails).
The curved apostrophe is the same character as the closing single quote. [104] "Smart quotes" features wrongly convert initial apostrophes (as in 'tis, 'em, 'til, and '89) into opening single quotes. (An example of this error appears in the advertisements for the television show 'Til Death .) The two very different functions of this character can cause confusion, particularly in British styles, [g] in which single quotes are the standard primary.
Unicode support has since become the norm for operating systems. Thus, in at least some cases, transferring content containing curved quotes (or any other non-ASCII characters) from a word processor to another application or platform has been less troublesome, provided all steps in the process (including the clipboard if applicable) are Unicode-aware. But there are still applications which still use the older character sets, or output data using them, and thus problems still occur.
There are other considerations for including curved quotes in the widely used markup languages HTML, XML, and SGML. If the encoding of the document supports direct representation of the characters, they can be used, but doing so can cause difficulties if the document needs to be edited by someone who is using an editor that cannot support the encoding. For example, many simple text editors only handle a few encodings or assume that the encoding of any file opened is a platform default, so the quote characters may appear as the generic replacement character � or "mojibake" (gibberish). HTML includes a set of entities for curved quotes: ‘
(left single), ’
(right single or apostrophe), ‚
(low 9 single), “
(left double), ”
(right double), and „
(low 9 double). XML does not define these by default, but specifications based on it can do so, and XHTML does. In addition, while the HTML 4, XHTML and XML specifications allow specifying numeric character references in either hexadecimal or decimal, SGML and older versions of HTML (and many old implementations) only support decimal references. Thus, to represent curly quotes in XML and SGML, it is safest to use the decimal numeric character references. That is, to represent the double curly quotes use “
and ”
, and to represent single curly quotes use ‘
and ’
. Both numeric and named references function correctly in almost every modern browser. While using numeric references can make a page more compatible with outdated browsers, using named references are safer for systems that handle multiple character encodings (i.e. RSS aggregators and search results).
In Windows file and folder names, the straight double quotation mark is prohibited, as it is a reserved character. The curved quotation marks, as well as the straight single quotation mark, are permitted.
The style of quoting known as Usenet quoting uses the greater-than sign, > prepended to a line of text to mark it as a quote. This convention was later standardized in RFC 3676, and was adopted subsequently by many email clients when automatically including quoted text from previous messages (in plain text mode).
In Unicode, 30 characters are marked Quotation Mark=Yes
by character property. [105] They all have general category "Punctuation", and a subcategory Open, Close, Initial, Final or Other (Ps, Pe, Pi, Pf, Po
). Several other Unicode characters with quotation mark semantics lack the character property.
Character | Comments |
---|---|
U+0022"QUOTATION MARK (", ") | Typewriter ("programmer's") quote, ambidextrous. Also known as "double quote". |
U+0027'APOSTROPHE (') | Typewriter ("programmer's") straight single quote, ambidextrous |
U+00AB«LEFT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK («) | Double angle quote (chevron, guillemet, duck-foot quote), left |
U+00BB»RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK (») | Double angle quote, right |
U+2018‘LEFT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (‘, ‘) | Single curved quote, left. Also known as inverted comma or turned comma [h] |
U+2019’ RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (’, ’, ’) | Single curved quote, right [i] |
U+201A‚SINGLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK (‚, ‚) | Low single curved quote, left |
U+201B‛SINGLE HIGH-REVERSED-9 QUOTATION MARK | also called single reversed comma, quotation mark |
U+201C“LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK (“, “) | Double curved quote, left |
U+201D”RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK (”, ”, ”) | Double curved quote, right |
U+201E„DOUBLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK („, „) | Low double curved quote, left |
U+201F‟DOUBLE HIGH-REVERSED-9 QUOTATION MARK | also called double reversed comma, quotation mark |
U+2039‹SINGLE LEFT-POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK (‹) | Single angle quote, left |
U+203A›SINGLE RIGHT-POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK (›) | Single angle quote, right |
U+2E42⹂DOUBLE LOW-REVERSED-9 QUOTATION MARK | also called double low reversed comma, quotation mark |
Quotation marks in Miscellaneous Technical | |
U+231C⌜TOP LEFT CORNER (⌜, ⌜) | jointly, these are also called Quine corners , indicating quasi-quotation or Gödel numerals |
U+231D⌝TOP RIGHT CORNER (⌝, ⌝) | |
Quotation marks in dingbats | |
U+275B❛HEAVY SINGLE TURNED COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
U+275C❜HEAVY SINGLE COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
U+275D❝HEAVY DOUBLE TURNED COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
U+275E❞HEAVY DOUBLE COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
U+1F676🙶SANS-SERIF HEAVY DOUBLE TURNED COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
U+1F677🙷SANS-SERIF HEAVY DOUBLE COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
U+1F678🙸SANS-SERIF HEAVY LOW DOUBLE COMMA QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT | Quotation Mark=No |
Quotation marks in Braille Patterns | |
U+2826⠦BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-236 | Braille double closing quotation mark; Quotation Mark=No |
U+2834⠴BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-356 | Braille double opening quotation mark; Quotation Mark=No |
Quotation marks in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean (CJK) | |
U+300C「LEFT CORNER BRACKET | CJK |
U+300D」RIGHT CORNER BRACKET | CJK |
U+300E『LEFT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | CJK |
U+300F』RIGHT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | CJK |
U+301D〝REVERSED DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK | CJK |
U+301E〞DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK | CJK |
U+301F〟LOW DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK | CJK |
Alternate encodings | |
U+FE41﹁PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT CORNER BRACKET | CJK Compatibility Form (vertical form to be used in horizontal texts), preferred use: U+300C |
U+FE42﹂PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT CORNER BRACKET | CJK Compatibility Form (vertical form to be used in horizontal texts), preferred use: U+300D |
U+FE43﹃PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | CJK Compatibility Form (vertical form to be used in horizontal texts), preferred use: U+300E |
U+FE44﹄PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | CJK Compatibility Form (vertical form to be used in horizontal texts), preferred use: U+300F |
U+FF02"FULLWIDTH QUOTATION MARK | Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms, fullwidth form corresponds with narrow U+0022 |
U+FF07'FULLWIDTH APOSTROPHE | Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms, fullwidth form corresponds with narrow U+0027 |
U+FF62「HALFWIDTH LEFT CORNER BRACKET | Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms, halfwidth form corresponds with wide U+300C |
U+FF63」HALFWIDTH RIGHT CORNER BRACKET | Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms, halfwidth form corresponds with wide U+300D |
‘
and ”
to produce typographic quotation marks; see below.)Punctuation marks are marks indicating how a piece of written text should be read and, consequently, understood. The oldest known examples of punctuation marks were found in the Mesha Stele from the 9th century BC, consisting of points between the words and horizontal strokes between sections. The alphabet-based writing began with no spaces, no capitalization, no vowels, and with only a few punctuation marks, as it was mostly aimed at recording business transactions. Only with the Greek playwrights did the ends of sentences begin to be marked to help actors know when to make a pause during performances. Punctuation includes space between words and both obsolete and modern signs.
The comma, is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. Some typefaces render it as a small line, slightly curved or straight, but inclined from the vertical, others give it the appearance of a miniature filled-in figure 9 placed on the baseline. In many typefaces it is the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark ’.
The apostrophe is a punctuation mark, and sometimes a diacritical mark, in languages that use the Latin alphabet and some other alphabets. In English, the apostrophe is used for three basic purposes:
A bracket is either of two tall fore- or back-facing punctuation marks commonly used to isolate a segment of text or data from its surroundings. They come in four main pairs of shapes, as given in the box to the right, which also gives their names, that vary between British and American English. "Brackets", without further qualification, are in British English the (...) marks and in American English the [...] marks.
In English writing, quotation marks or inverted commas, also known informally as quotes, talking marks, speech marks, quote marks, quotemarks or speechmarks, are punctuation marks placed on either side of a word or phrase in order to identify it as a quotation, direct speech or a literal title or name. Quotation marks may be used to indicate that the meaning of the word or phrase they surround should be taken to be different from that typically associated with it, and are often used in this way to express irony. They are also sometimes used to emphasise a word or phrase, although this is usually considered incorrect.
An interpunct·, also known as an interpoint, middle dot, middot, centered dot or centred dot, is a punctuation mark consisting of a vertically centered dot used for interword separation in Classical Latin. It appears in a variety of uses in some modern languages.
AZERTY is a specific layout for the characters of the Latin alphabet on typewriter keys and computer keyboards. The layout takes its name from the first six letters to appear on the first row of alphabetical keys; that is,. Similar to the QWERTZ layout, it is modelled on the English QWERTY layout. It is used in France and Belgium, although each of these countries has its own national variation on the layout. Luxembourg and Switzerland use the Swiss QWERTZ keyboard. Most residents of Quebec, the mainly French-speaking province of Canada, use a QWERTY keyboard that has been adapted to the French language such as the Multilingual Standard keyboard CAN/CSA Z243.200-92 which is stipulated by the government of Quebec and the Government of Canada.
The backtick` is a typographical mark used mainly in computing. It is also known as backquote, grave, or grave accent.
The ʻokina is the letter that transcribes the glottal stop consonant in Hawaiian. It does not have distinct uppercase and lowercase forms, and is represented electronically by the modifier letter turned comma: ʻ.
ArmSCII or ARMSCII is a set of obsolete single-byte character encodings for the Armenian alphabet defined by Armenian national standard 166–9. ArmSCII is an acronym for Armenian Standard Code for Information Interchange, similar to ASCII for the American standard. It has been superseded by the Unicode standard.
Guillemets are a pair of punctuation marks in the form of sideways double chevrons, « and », used as quotation marks in a number of languages. In some of these languages, "single" guillemets, ‹ and ›, are used for a quotation inside another quotation. Guillemets are not conventionally used in English.
The hyphen-minus symbol - is the form of hyphen most commonly used in digital documents. On most keyboards, it is the only character that resembles a minus sign or a dash so it is also used for these. The name hyphen-minus derives from the original ASCII standard, where it was called hyphen (minus). The character is referred to as a hyphen, a minus sign, or a dash according to the context where it is being used.
The orthography of the Greek language ultimately has its roots in the adoption of the Greek alphabet in the 9th century BC. Some time prior to that, one early form of Greek, Mycenaean, was written in Linear B, although there was a lapse of several centuries between the time Mycenaean stopped being written and the time when the Greek alphabet came into use.
A Hebrew keyboard comes in two different keyboard layouts. Most Hebrew keyboards are bilingual, with Latin characters, usually in a US Qwerty layout.
The ditto mark is a shorthand sign, used mostly in hand-written text, indicating that the words or figures above it are to be repeated.
Japanese punctuation includes various written marks, which differ from those found in European languages, as well as some not used in formal Japanese writing but frequently found in more casual writing, such as exclamation and question marks.
Writing systems that use Chinese characters also include various punctuation marks, derived from both Chinese and Western sources. Historically, jùdòu annotations were often used to indicate the boundaries of sentences and clauses in text. The use of punctuation in written Chinese only became mandatory during the 20th century, due to Western influence. Unlike modern punctuation, judou marks were added by scholars for pedagogical purposes and were not viewed as integral to the text. Texts were therefore generally transmitted without judou. In most cases, this practice did not interfere with the interpretation of a text, although it occasionally resulted in ambiguity.
For the Korean language, South Korea mainly uses a combination of East Asian and European punctuation, while North Korea uses more of the East Asian punctuation style.
Punctuation in the English language helps the reader to understand a sentence through visual means other than just the letters of the alphabet. English punctuation has two complementary aspects: phonological punctuation, linked to how the sentence can be read aloud, particularly to pausing; and grammatical punctuation, linked to the structure of the sentence. In popular discussion of language, incorrect punctuation is often seen as an indication of lack of education and of a decline of standards.
The compound point is an obsolete typographical construction. Keith Houston reported that this form of punctuation doubling, which involved the comma dash (,—), the semicolon dash (;—), the colon dash, or "dog's bollocks" (:—), and less often the stop-dash (.—) arose in the seventeenth century, citing examples from as early as 1622. More traditionally, these paired forms of punctuation seem most often to have been called (generically) compound points and (specifically) semicolon dash, comma dash, colon dash, and point dash.
Dans le chapitre sur les symboles graphiques, Isidore évoque la diplè (chevron, en grec) : ' > Diplè : nos copistes placent ce signe dans les livres des gens d'Eglise pour séparer ou pour signaler les citations tirées des Saintes Ecritures.'