Ditto mark

Ditto mark

The ditto mark (″)[1] is a typographic symbol indicating that the word(s) or figure(s) above it are to be repeated. For example:

Black pens, box of twenty ..... £2.10
Blue                 ..... £2.35

The word ditto comes from the Tuscan language, where it is the past participle of the verb dire (to say), with the meaning of “said”, as in the locution “the said story”. The first recorded use of ditto with this meaning in English occurs in 1625.[2] Early evidence of ditto marks can be seen on a cuneiform tablet of the Neo-Assyrian period (934 – 608 BC) where two vertical marks are used in a table of synonyms to repeat text,[3] while in China the corresponding mark is two horizontal lines (二); see iteration mark.

An advertisement from 1833. The second item on the list can be read as "Prime American Pork, in barrels", while the third is "Prime American Pork, in Half barrels".

Unicode

Unicode has defined the ditto character as U+2033 DOUBLE PRIME (HTML ″ · ″). In practice, however, from the typewriter era stems that closing double quotation marks (”) or straight double quotation marks (") are often used instead. The abbreviation do. is also used [see above] .

The character U+3003 DITTO MARK (HTML 〃) is to be used in CJK scripts only.[4][5][6]

See also

References

  1. "Oxford English Dictionary". Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  2. Definition at The Free Dictionary
  3. K.4375 and File:Library of Ashurbanipal synonym list tablet.jpg
  4. "Unicode Standard Annex #24: Unicode Script Property". 2.9 Script_Extensions Property. Retrieved 2013-05-19.
  5. "ScriptExtensions.txt". Retrieved 2013-05-19.
  6. "CJK symbols and Punctuation" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-05-20.

External links

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