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A Short History of Punctuation

Early Greek writing had little punctuation and changed direction at the end of each line. Later Greeks standardized writing direction and showed paragraph breaks. The playwright Aristophanes invented marks to indicate pauses for readers. Romans further developed punctuation by separating words with dots and indenting the first letter of paragraphs. They adapted some Greek marks but the system broke down in the Middle Ages when few could read and write.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
239 views7 pages

A Short History of Punctuation

Early Greek writing had little punctuation and changed direction at the end of each line. Later Greeks standardized writing direction and showed paragraph breaks. The playwright Aristophanes invented marks to indicate pauses for readers. Romans further developed punctuation by separating words with dots and indenting the first letter of paragraphs. They adapted some Greek marks but the system broke down in the Middle Ages when few could read and write.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A Short History of

Punctuation
by Polly M. Robertus
Early Greeks had
hardly any
punctuation
and even changed the
direction of
their writing at the end
of each line. Later,
they changed to a way
of writing
that favored right -
handed people and
showed
where a new
paragraph began by
underlining
the first line of it.
The Greek playwright
Aristophanes,
invented marks to
show there the
readers should take
breath.
The Romans made
writing much easier
to read by putting dots
between words
and by moving the
first letter of a
paragraph into the left
margin.
They adapted some of
the Greek marks
such as colon mark to
indicate
phrase endings. In the
early Middle .
Ages, this system of
punctuation
broke down because
very few people
could read and write
but writers.
Skept a space at the
end of a
sentence and
continued to mark
paragraphs.
Eventually, words
were
separated again and
new sentences
began with a larger
lettter
A Short History of Punctuation

by Polly M. Robertus

Early Greeks had hardly any punctuation


and even changed the direction of
their writing at the end of each line. Later,
they changed to a way of writing
that favored right - handed people and showed
where a new paragraph began by underlining
the first line of it.
The Greek playwright Aristophanes,
invented marks to show there the
readers should take breath.
The Romans made writing much easier
to read by putting dots between words
and by moving the first letter of a
paragraph into the left margin.
They adapted some of the Greek marks
such as colon mark to indicate
phrase endings. In the early Middle .
Ages, this system of punctuation
broke down because very few people
could read and write but writers.
Skept a space at the end of a
sentence and continued to mark
paragraphs. Eventually, words were
separated again and new sentences
began with a larger lettter

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