Hypodiastole

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Greek hypodiastole, resembling a squat semicircle
Latin comma, resembling a filled-in, curved numeral 9
Hypodiastole (left), in contrast to a comma (right)

The hypodiastole (Greek: ὑποδιαστολή, hypodiastolḗ, lit.'lower separation [mark]'), also known as a diastole,[1] was an interpunct developed in late Ancient and Byzantine Greek texts before the separation of words by spaces was common. In the scriptio continua then used, a group of letters might have separate meanings as a single word or as a pair of words. The papyrological hyphen (enotikon) showed a group of letters should be read together as a single word, and the hypodiastole showed that they should be taken separately. Compare ὅ⸒τι ('whatever') to ὅτι ('...that...').[2]

The hypodiastole was similar in appearance to the comma and was eventually entirely conflated with it. In Modern Greek, ypodiastolī́ (υποδιαστολή) refers to the comma in its role as a decimal separator, and words such as ό,τι are written with standard commas. A separate Unicode point, ISO/IEC 10646 standard (U+2E12) (⸒), exists for the hypodiastole but is intended only to reproduce its historical occurrence in Greek texts.[2]

See also

References

  1. Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed. "diastole, n." Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1895.
  2. Nicolas, Nick. "Greek Unicode Issues: Punctuation Archived November 20, 2014, at the Wayback Machine". 2005. Accessed 7 October 2014.