Ditto mark
The ditto mark " is a typographic symbol indicating that the word(s) or figure(s) above it are to be repeated.[1][2] The mark may be made using a pair of apostrophes,[1] a quotation mark,[2][3] or the equivalent mark from Chinese, Japanese and Korean,[3] all of which are visually similar.
" '' 〃 | |
---|---|
Ditto mark | |
In Unicode | U+0022 " QUOTATION MARK (HTML " · ", " ) U+0027 ' APOSTROPHE (HTML ' · ' ) U+03003 〃 DITTO MARK (HTML 〃 ) (CJK character) |
Related | |
See also | U+00BB » RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK (Equivalent in French) |
For example:
Black pens, box of twenty | ..... | $2.10 |
Blue " " " " | ..... | $2.35 |
In English, the abbreviation do. is sometimes used.
History
Early evidence of ditto marks can be seen on a cuneiform tablet of the Neo-Assyrian period (934–608 BCE) where two vertical marks are used in a table of synonyms to repeat text.[4]
In China the corresponding historical mark was two horizontal lines 二 (also the symbol of "two"), found in bronze script from the Zhou Dynasty, as in the example at right (circa 825 BCE). In script form this became 〻, and is now written as 々; see iteration mark.
The word ditto comes from the Tuscan language,[5] 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.[5]
Other languages
For Chinese, Japanese and Korean, there is also a Unicode character U+3003 〃 DITTO MARK in the range CJK Symbols and Punctuation. The equivalent symbol used in French, », is called a guillemet itératif.[6]
See also
Notes
References
- "Ditto mark". Oxford Dictionaries. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
the mark is a symbol made from two apostrophes
- "Ditto mark". Collins Dictionaries. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
two small marks (") placed under something to indicate that it is to be repeated
- "Ditto". Cambridge Dictionaries. Retrieved 30 December 2019. but the Cambridge Dictionary of Business English on the same page uses the CJK ditto mark (〃)
- K.4375 and File:Library of Ashurbanipal synonym list tablet.jpg
- Definition at The Free Dictionary
- "Banque de dépannage linguistique: Guillemets itératifs" [Linguistic help desk: Iterative quotes] (in French). Office québécois de la langue française. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
External links
The dictionary definition of 〃 at Wiktionary - fr:Guillemet#Répétition at French Wikipedia