Western antiquity During antiquity, most scribes in the West wrote in , i.e., without punctuation delimiting
word boundaries. Around the 5th century BC, the Greeks began using punctuation consisting of vertically arranged dots—usually a dicolon or tricolon—as an aid in the oral delivery of texts. After 200 BC, Greek scribes adopted the system invented by
Aristophanes of Byzantium, where a single dot called a was placed at one of several heights to denote rhetorical divisions in speech: • a low on the baseline to mark off a (a unit smaller than a
clause) • a at midheight to mark off a clause () • a high to mark off a sentence () In addition, the Greeks used the
paragraphos (or
gamma) to mark the beginning of sentences, marginal
diples to mark quotations, and a
koronis to indicate the end of major sections. During the 1st century BC,
Romans also made occasional use of symbols to indicate pauses, but by the 4th century AD the Greek —called in Latin—prevailed, as reported by
Aelius Donatus and
Isidore of Seville (7th century). Latin texts were sometimes laid out , where each sentence was placed on its own line. Diples were used, but by the late period, these often degenerated into comma-shaped marks.
Medieval Punctuation developed dramatically when large numbers of copies of the
Bible started to be produced. These were designed to be read aloud, so the
copyists began to introduce a range of marks to aid the reader, including
indentation, various punctuation marks (
diple, , ), and an early version of initial capitals ().
Jerome and his colleagues, who translated the Bible into
Latin, the
Vulgate (), employed a layout system based on established practices for teaching the speeches of
Demosthenes and
Cicero. Under his layout every sense-unit was indented and given its own line. This layout was solely used for biblical manuscripts during the 5th–9th centuries, but was abandoned in favor of punctuation. In the 7th–8th centuries
Irish and
Anglo-Saxon scribes, whose
native languages were not derived from
Latin, added more visual cues to render texts more intelligible. Irish scribes introduced the practice of
word separation. Likewise, insular scribes adopted the system while adapting it for minuscule script (so as to be more prominent) by using not differing height but rather a differing number of marks aligned horizontally (or sometimes triangularly) to signify a pause's duration: one mark for a minor pause, two for a medium one, and three for a major one. Most common were the , a comma-shaped mark, and the , a 7-shaped mark (, usually called the "
Tironian et", equivalent to a modern
ampersand), often used in combination. The same marks could be used in the margin to mark off quotations. In the late 8th century, a different system emerged in
France under the
Carolingian dynasty. Originally indicating how the voice should be
modulated when chanting the
liturgy, the migrated into any text meant to be read aloud, and then to all manuscripts. first reached
England in the late 10th century, probably during the Benedictine reform movement, but was not adopted until after the
Norman conquest. The original were the , marking a minor pause within the sentence, , marking a major pause within the sentence, , marking the end of a declarative sentence, and , marking the end of an interrogative sentence. A fifth symbol, the was added in the 10th century to indicate a pause of a value between the and . In the late 11th/early 12th century, the disappeared and was taken over by the simple (now with two distinct values). The
late Middle Ages saw the addition of the (slash or slash with a midpoint dot), which was often used in conjunction with the for different types of pauses. Direct quotations were marked with marginal diples, as in Antiquity, but from at least the 12th century, scribes also began entering diples (sometimes double) within the column of text.
Medieval China Punctuation marks, especially
spacing, were not needed in
logographic or
syllabic (such as
Chinese and
Mayan script) texts because disambiguation and emphasis could be communicated by employing a separate written form distinct from the spoken form of the language. Ancient Chinese classical texts were transmitted without punctuation. However, many
Warring States period bamboo texts contain the symbols and indicating the end of a chapter and
full stop, respectively. By the
Song dynasty, the addition of punctuation to texts by scholars to aid comprehension became common.
Printing-press era The amount of printed material and its readership began to increase after the invention of moveable type in Europe in the 1450s.
Martin Luther's German Bible translation was one of the first mass-printed works; he used only
virgule,
full stop, and less than one percent
question marks as punctuation. The focus of punctuation still was rhetorical, to aid reading aloud. As explained by writer and editor
Lynne Truss, "The rise of printing in the 14th and 15th centuries meant that a standard system of punctuation was urgently required." Printed books, whose letters were uniform, could be read much more rapidly than manuscripts. Rapid reading, or reading aloud, did not allow time to analyze sentence structures. This increased speed led to the greater use and finally standardization of punctuation, which showed the relationships of words with each other: where one sentence ends and another begins, for example. The introduction of a standard system of punctuation has also been attributed to the Venetian printers
Aldus Manutius and his grandson. They have been credited with popularizing the practice of ending sentences with the
colon or
full stop (period), inventing the
semicolon, making occasional use of
parentheses, and creating the modern
comma by lowering the virgule. By 1566, Aldus Manutius the Younger was able to state that the main object of punctuation was the clarification of
syntax. By the 19th century, punctuation in the Western world had evolved "to classify the marks hierarchically, in terms of weight". The use of punctuation was not standardised until after the invention of printing. According to the 1885 edition of
The American Printer, the importance of punctuation was noted in various sayings by children, such as:
Charles the First walked and talked Half an hour after
his head was cut off. With a semicolon and a comma added, it reads as follows: Charles the First walked and talked; Half an hour after, his head was cut off. In a 19th-century manual of
typography, Thomas MacKellar writes:
Typewriters and electronic communication The introduction of
electrical telegraphy with a limited set of transmission codes and
typewriters with a limited set of keys influenced punctuation subtly. For example,
curved quotes and
apostrophes were all collapsed into two characters (' and "). The
hyphen,
minus sign, and dashes of various widths have been collapsed into a single character (-), sometimes repeated to represent a long dash. The
spaces of different widths available to professional typesetters were generally replaced by a single full-character-width space, with typefaces
monospaced. In some cases, a typewriter keyboard did not include an exclamation point (!), which could otherwise be constructed by the
overstrike of an apostrophe and a period; the original
Morse code did not have an exclamation point. These simplifications have been carried forward into digital writing, with
teleprinters and the
ASCII character set essentially supporting the same characters as typewriters. Treatment of whitespace in
HTML discouraged the practice (in English prose) of putting two full spaces after a full stop, since a single or double space would appear the same on the screen. (Most style guides now discourage double spaces, and some electronic writing tools, including Wikipedia's software, automatically collapse double spaces to single.) The full traditional set of typesetting tools became available with the advent of
desktop publishing and more sophisticated
word processors. Despite the widespread adoption of character sets like
Unicode that support the punctuation of traditional typesetting, writing forms like
text messages tend to use the simplified ASCII style of punctuation, with the addition of new non-text characters like
emoji. Informal
text speak tends to drop punctuation when not needed, including some ways that would be considered errors in more formal writing. In the computer era, punctuation characters were recycled for use in
programming languages and
URLs. Due to its use in
email and
Twitter handles, the
at sign (@) has gone from an obscure character mostly used by sellers of bulk commodities (10 pounds @$2.00 per pound), to a very common character in common use for both technical routing and an abbreviation for "at". The
tilde (~), in moveable type only used in combination with vowels, for mechanical reasons ended up as a
separate key on mechanical typewriters, and like @ it has been put to completely new uses. ==In English==