Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Punctuation Marks (Encore)
Episode Date: December 12, 2023There was a time when languages had no punctuation. Not only did they not have punctuation, but they also didn’t even have spaces between words, and in some cases, they didn’t even use vowels. I...t was extremely confusing if you were trying to read something, so eventually, people began inserting marks and characters into text to make it easier to read. Learn more about punctuation marks and how and why they were developed on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month ButcherBox Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free steak for a year and get $20 off." Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
There once was a time when languages had no punctuation.
Not only did they not have punctuation, but they also didn't even have spaces between words,
and in some cases they didn't even use vowels.
It was extremely confusing if you were trying to read something,
so eventually people began inserting marks and characters into text to make it easier to read.
Learn more about punctuation marks, and how and why they were developed on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
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Language developed as a tool for oral communication.
Humans were speaking with each other long before anyone developed as soon.
system to record words. When written language was developed, it was only known by very few people,
and usually just to record basic information. For the purposes of this episode, I'm only going to
be focusing on languages that use alphabets, not logographic systems like Chinese, which are a totally
different thing. And eventually, I'll just focus on English, which is the language that all of you
listening know. The first writing systems were extremely basic. Some of the first alphabetic writing
system such as Phoenician and Hebrew, didn't have lowercase letters, didn't use spaces between words,
and didn't even use vowels. It is entirely possible to read something written without spaces,
lowercase letters, or vowels. However, it's very slow going, and it's very easy to confuse what
is being said. This type of writing became known as Scriptura Continua. In the ancient world,
there were, relatively speaking, few written documents. It was expected that it would take time to
read a scroll, and it wasn't something that you would fully grasp on the first read-through.
There once was a second-century Roman writer by the name of Aulis Gelius, who refused to read out
loud a manuscript that he had never read before because he said he would mangle the meaning.
So he gave the document to a bystander who could read, and the bystander did exactly that.
One of the first people to attempt to use something like punctuation was the Greek scholar Aristophanes
of Byzantium. He was the head librarian at the Library of Alexandria, and was responsible for
the many scrolls that the library held. He developed a system of dots that could be inserted into
text, which would indicate where to pause when speaking. The dot was the only symbol he used, but he used
it in three different ways. He could be placed low, medium, or high, depending on how it was
supposed to be used. A low dot had the same function as a comma. A middle dot was similar to a colon,
and a high dot was similar to a period. The marks created by Aristophanes of Byzantium weren't really
punctuation. They were more designed for orators that were reading text, not denoting any sort of grammar.
Despite copying many Greek cultural innovations, the Romans never really adopted Aristophanes
system universally. That was because the written word was subordinate to the spoken word to the
Romans. They occasionally used some marks to indicate breaks, but there was no consistency with its
usage. It was until the rise of Christianity that writing became more important. The Christians
based their faith on written text, in particular the Bible.
so the creation and duplication were of central importance.
In the 7th century, Irish and Anglo-Saxon monks,
whose native language wasn't based on Latin,
began using spaces between their words.
The Bishop Isidore of Seville adopted a similar system to Aristophanes
where he would use dots to represent pauses,
but it wasn't the same system.
Many scribes developed their own system for creating breaks,
so what sort of punctuation marks existed in a text
depended upon who was doing the writing.
What really changed everything was the advent of the printing press and movable type.
With movable type, there was now a need for a consistent standard for punctuation marks and text.
Standard-width text made it easier to read something without practice to decipher what the text meant.
There was now a need to have a way to indicate where sentences ended and where there were pauses.
The printer who was credited with the creation of modern punctuation marks is Aldus Menutzius.
Minutzius was a printer in Venice who popularized the use of a period, or a full stop, as it's known in the Commonwealth, to end a sentence.
He invented the semicolon, created the modern use of the comma, and popularized the use of parentheses.
Each punctuation mark has a slightly different history and a different reason for its development.
So, here's a rundown of the most popular punctuation marks and how they were developed.
As I just mentioned, the period, or full stop, is the oldest punctuation mark.
The original use of a dot aligned with the bottom of the letters was used as a comeda,
and it was Ilyzidore of Seville that began using an essay-sentence stop.
The word period comes from the Latin, Peridose.
As we'll see, the period, or really just a dot, became the foundation for many other
punctuation marks.
The other big punctuation mark is the comma.
The comma actually evolved from a mark known as the Virgula Suspensiva, which began seeing
use in the 12th century.
The Vergula Suspensiva was a slash with a dot in the middle, and the Vergula Suspensiva had the same function as a comma.
Over time, the dot on the slash kept moving down until it became a dot with a tail below it, which was of course created by Aldus Manusius.
I, of course, can't talk about the comma without mentioning one of the most heated debates in the world of grammar, the Oxford or serial comma.
An Oxford comma is the comma that is placed before the word and in a list in a sense.
sentence. Personally, I use the Oxford comma because it can clarify potential confusion. And to be
completely honest, I don't really understand the argument against it or why people would feel so
strongly about it. The colon is based on Aristophanes' middle dot. It was intended to be a pause
and length between a comma and a period. It was eventually replaced with two dots instead of a
middle dot. For a time, the colon was actually used to indicate the end of a sentence before it was
replaced by the period. In the 17th century, in English,
English. There was a use of a colon followed by a dash to indicate an extended pause. This symbol
actually appeared in some very early printings of Shakespeare. The symbol was colloquially known as the
dog's bollocks, and it fell out a use. The semicolon was also developed by Aldous Manusius.
It was originally intended to be an intermediate pause between a comma and a colon, which is why it
visually consists of a mix between a comma and a colon. The modern apostrophe came from, you guessed,
the print shop of Aldous Manusius. Its original use was what was called the French style.
The French style is the use of an apostrophe to replace a sound, usually in a vowel in the
article's Lee or La. If you see something spelled L apostrophe something, that's French, that's
the French style. This was eventually adopted in English in similar use for removing vowels,
such as the word I'm, a contraction of I am. And it was later adopted for all contractions
and then four possessives.
The exclamation point was first developed in English in the 16th century.
It was originally just a straight line over a period.
It was known as a point of admiration or a mark of admiration,
and the term exclamation point or exclamation mark
didn't actually come into use until the 19th century.
Many of the first typewriters didn't actually have an exclamation point key.
To create an exclamation point, you had to type a period,
and then backspace and type an apostrophe over the period.
The question mark is actually older than many of the other punctuation marks.
The first known use of a mark to indicate a question comes from a fifth century Syriac Bible,
and it was simply a double dot used at the start of a sentence.
In the 8th century, there was a symbol called a lightning flash,
which was like the modern tilda symbol, which is a horizontal wavy line.
This symbol was eventually turned vertically, curved even more, and then placed over a period.
The question mark has been used in different ways in different light,
languages. In Spanish, an upside-down question mark is placed at the start of a sentence,
and in Arabic, a mere image question mark is used. Parentheses, also known as brackets,
were also first used by Aldous Manusius. They were the rounded brackets that were designed
to look like the Crescent Moon. Since then, there have been a host of similar brackets which
serve similar purposes, including square brackets, angled brackets, and curly brackets. Quotation
marks were developed by the ancient Greeks, and then a similar system was adopted by Isid
or of Seville, to indicate what parts of a manuscript actually came from the Bible.
The double-apostrophe quotation mark came into use in Italy in the 15th century,
and in the 19th century, variations in the quotation mark developed in different countries.
For the most part, these were just differences in typography,
with straight versus curly quotation marks and the direction they pointed.
What I've just outlined are most of the punctuation marquees on your keyboard,
and many of the other symbols I've discussed on a previous episode on the origins of math symbols.
There are, however, punctuation marks that are less popular that have been proposed.
One such symbol is the interrobang.
The interrobang is a combination of an exclamation point and a question mark,
and it's literally created by superimposing one over the other.
The intero bang was created by an American advertising executive Martin Specter in 1962.
He proposed a single punctuation mark for a surprised question
instead of putting an exclamation point next to a question mark.
The Interrobang is actually part of the Unicode character set and can be found in several popular fonts.
Two other recent innovations are the question comma and the exclamation comma.
They're basically the same as the question mark or an exclamation mark, except that they're over a comma instead of a period.
They were designed for use inside of a sentence like a comma.
These symbols never caught on, and as far as I know, they aren't part of any font set, ASCII, or Unicode.
punctuation marks are so integrated into our language, it would be very strange if we didn't use them.
Imagine how difficult and confusing it would be to read if there were no periods or commas.
The development of punctuation marks maybe isn't as important as the development of the alphabet,
but at the same time, it probably also isn't too far behind.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiever.
I wanted to give a big thanks to everyone who supported.
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