
National Punctuation Day commemorates all punctuation on September 24th. A period, a comma, a semicolon, a question mark and an exclamation point are examples of some of the punctuation used in writing. They separate sentences and their elements to clarify meaning. Without them, meaning would be lost or up for interpretation.
- 900 BC – Since many of the languages that came before this document did not require spacing or punctuation and were predominantly verbal, the earliest known document with punctuation is the Mesha Stele.
- 200 BC – Though they had previously written in ‘scriptura continua,’ the Greeks began to adopt Aristophanes of Byzantium’s system of a single punctuation dot to mark speeches.
- 400 AD – As the Bible begins to be mass-produced, punctuation is popularized along with it.
- 15th Century – Though the exclamation point has helped express strong sentiments on paper since the 15th century, this upstanding punctuation mark didn’t get its own dedicated typewriter key until the 1970s. Before then, typists who wanted to use interjections in their work had to type a period, then backspace and type an apostrophe atop it. Secretarial manuals of the ’50s called this Franken symbol a bang—not to be confused with an interrobang, which is an exclamation point overlapping with a question mark to indicate incredulity.
- 1400s – Venetian printers Aldus Manutius and Sons are credited with popularizing many forms of punctuation we still use today.
- 16th Century – @ has hilarious names around the world…A Dutchman calls it the monkey’s tail, an Israeli insists it’s a strudel. They aren’t bantering about some new simian-themed bakery; they’re just describing the @. Though shorthand use of the @ dates back to the 16th century, it took English speakers a remarkably long time to settle on a name.
- 1968 – # has a name you’d never guess…Depending on when you were born, you probably know the # symbol as either a pound sign, a number sign, or for the Twitter junkies among us, a hashtag. It turns out, none of those names are right: According to an engineer at Bell Labs (formerly part of AT&T), which made the symbol mainstream via its touch-tone telephones in 1968, that little hex is called an octothorpe.
- 1970s – With the rise of computers, online chatting, and programming, punctuation meanings, and standards begin fluctuating rapidly in the late 20th century and into the 21st century.
- 2004 – Punctuation Day was established by Jeff Rubin, founder of the day and organizer of www.nationalpunctuationday.com (site no longer active).
- Punctuation can be tricky for some people, those who struggle to know when it’s appropriate to use a colon, or a set of brackets, or even an ellipsis.
- Today, we know it as the “at mark” or “commercial at” and are accustomed to seeing it in e-mail addresses. Meanwhile, the rest of the world was inventing brilliant descriptors, like the “little dog” (Russian), the “small snail” (Italian), and the straight-up “crazy A” (Bosnian).
- For some deranged reason, they got rid of one of the most useful symbols ever created: the interrobang. It’s even fun to say. It’s a question mark superimposed over an exclamation point, which on a modern keyboard is typed either ?! or !?. It’s intended to represent a question asked excitedly. You can’t beat a punctuation mark that’s simultaneously a portmanteau and onomatopoeia. If you agree, go like the interrobang Facebook page.
- The oh-so-misunderstood comma has an equally treacherous-sounding history. It comes from the Greek “komma,” which refers to something that’s been cut off (i.e., a clause).
- Hyphens, en dashes and em dashes, oh my! Hyphens are just used to join words, but people tend to think they’re the only horizontal punctuation game in town, even substituting them for their longer counterparts (oh, the horror!). En dashes are slightly longer than hyphens. Actually, they’re the same width as the letter N, and they indicate that you’re trying to show range (10–12 pounds). The em dash is… wait for it… the same width as the letter M and is a legit punctuation mark, often subbing in for commas and parentheses when greater emphasis is required — like when you’re trying to make a point.
- An ellipsis, those three little dots you see in a row so often, is from the ancient Greek meaning “omission,” which is exactly how it’s typically used in journalism — to indicate that words the journalist doesn’t believe affect the meaning of the quote are being left out.
- A question mark used to be a word. In Latin, when they wrote a query, they’d finish it with the word “question” (which contrary to how it sounds, isn’t a spell in a Harry Potter book). Later, they abbreviated it “qo,” but because of the tendency to read it as the ending of a word, they put both in a single space, with the lowercase Q on top of the lowercase O. As time went on, people made the Q a tailed loop and the O a dot to save time.
- & used to be in the alphabet. Invented by an ancient scribe, the symbol & used to follow Z in the alphabet. Since it didn’t have a name, children would sing “Z and per se and” (which means “Z and which means ‘and’”). After a while, the slurring of “and per se and” became ampersand, the modern name of the symbol.
- Languages did not always have punctuation
- Most Asian and African languages did not have punctuation or function with the bare minimum
- Sanskrit has a different or unique way of grouping and packaging words to compensate for its lack of punctuation.
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