Double hyphen explained

In Latin script, the double hyphen is a punctuation mark that consists of two parallel hyphens. It was a development of the earlier, which developed from a Central European variant of the virgule slash, originally a form of scratch comma. Similar marks (see below) are used in other scripts.

In order to avoid it being confused with the equals sign, the double hyphen is often shown as a double oblique hyphen in modern typography. The double hyphen is also not to be confused with two consecutive hyphens (-

-), which are often used to represent an em dash or en dash due to the limitations of typewriters and keyboards that do not have distinct hyphen and dash keys.

Usage

The double hyphen is used for several different purposes throughout the world:

Stylistic variant of the single hyphen

When the double hyphen is used as a functionally equivalent graphical variant (allograph) of the single hyphen, it has the same Unicode code point as a conventional hyphen (since how it is displayed/printed is a font choice on that occasion).

Similar marks

Other forms of double hyphen are given unique codepoints in Unicode:

Name Glyph Code point Purpose
U+1400Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics to distinguish a hyphen from U+1428 (ᐨ)
U+2E17Coptic and ancient Near Eastern language scholarship
U+2E40Generic (non-Asian) double hyphen
U+30A0Japanese and orthography (in Katakana or Hiragana script)
U+A78AUsed as a tone letter and also to mark clitics in interlinear glossing

References

  1. Web site: Double hyphen(ダブルハイフン)の意味 - goo国語辞書.
  2. [Arie de Jong]

External links