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History of Punctuation

Early Greek writing had little punctuation and changed direction at the end of each line, but later Greeks underlined the start of paragraphs and wrote right-to-left. The Romans made writing easier to read by adding dots between words and indenting paragraphs, and adapted Greek marks like the colon. During the Middle Ages, few could read so the punctuation system broke down, but writers kept spacing and larger first letters for sentences and paragraphs.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views2 pages

History of Punctuation

Early Greek writing had little punctuation and changed direction at the end of each line, but later Greeks underlined the start of paragraphs and wrote right-to-left. The Romans made writing easier to read by adding dots between words and indenting paragraphs, and adapted Greek marks like the colon. During the Middle Ages, few could read so the punctuation system broke down, but writers kept spacing and larger first letters for sentences and paragraphs.
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A Short History of Punctuation

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 favoured
right handed people and showed where a
new paragraph began by underlining the first
line of it. Later, the Greek playwright
Aristophanes inverted marks to show 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 the colon mark to indicate phrase endings.
In the early middle ages, this system of
punctuation broke down because every few
people could read and write but writers kept
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 letter.

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