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Obelism
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Obelism is the practice of annotating with marks set in the margins. Modern obelisms are used by editors when a manuscript or typescript. Examples are "stet" (which is Latin for "Let it stand", used in this context to mean "disregard the previous mark") and "" (for "Delete").

The obelos symbol (see ) gets its name from the spit, or sharp end of a in . An obelos was placed by editors on the margins of manuscripts, especially in , to indicate lines that may not have been written by Homer. The system was developed by Aristarchus and notably used later by in his . Origen marked spurious words with an opening obelus and a closing metobelos ("end of obelus").

There were many other such symbols, to indicate corrections, emendations, deletions, additions, and so on. Most used are the editorial coronis, the , the forked paragraphos, the reversed forked paragraphos, the , the , the , and the dotted right-pointing angle, which is also known as the . Loosely, all these symbols, and the act of annotation by means of them, are obelism.

These nine ancient Greek textual annotation symbols are also included in the supplemental punctuation list of ISO/IEC 10646 standard for character sets.

was used for breaks.]]
separated words before the use of spaces.]]


Modern encoding
encodes the following:

Some of these were also used in Ancient Greek punctuation as . Punctuation The two-dot punctuation is used as a word separator in Old Turkic script.


See also
  • . A horizontal form of the dagger mark was used an obelus.
  • List of proofreader's marks
  • General PunctuationUnicode block containing punctuation, spacing, and formatting characters

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