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Meet The Obeli ⸎ ⸖ ⸓ ⸔ ÷

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Edited by Richard Walker, Sunday 22 March 2026 at 00:06

Obeli (singular: obelos) were marks Greek editors and scribes made in the margins of manuscripts: annotations with a variety of meanings, such as drawing attention to passages that might be spurious, making emendations, marking paragraphs and new sections, and so on. They are the distant ancestors of the proofreader's marks still in use by editors today.

They have beautiful and exotic shapes and even more beautiful names. The ones in the title of this post are the Coronis, the Dotted Diple, the Dotted Obelos, the Downwards Ancora and a different Dotted Obelos which has become the modern day division sign. These have Unicode encodings, so I could put them in the title, but not all obeli have encodings. Here are some drawings I made of other, based on my reading of the Wikipedia articles Obelisms and Aristarchian symbols.

In the three types of stigme, "mark", you can already see the beginning of modern punctuation, although telling the difference between low and middle, or middle and high must have ben a bit hit-and miss sometimes. So now we keep them all on the same level, give low a tail, and make middle a hybrid of low and high. Genius or what.

,   ;   . 

Obelos has an interesting etymology. It came into OE from Latin obelus, a borrowing from Greek ὀβελός, which meant a pointy thing such as a spit or a lance or a needle, and I guess it came to be applied the kind of obelos this post is about because some of these marks look a bit pointy or like needles.

The same root gives us obelisk, "little obelos", the name the Greeks used for the tall slender four-sided monuments of Ancient Egypt. You can see one of these on the Embankment in London, carried far from its original home, and usually known as Cleopatra's Needle. Quite a few of these obelisks were removed from their original locations, many in Roman times, and today I believe more olelisks survive outside Egypt than in the country itself.

We also have the Obol, an Ancient Greek coin worth one divided by six of a Drachma, which itself meant a "handful" (of obols) and I have read that at an early period in Greek history iron nails might have been used a currency and, if so, that would account for the later name of the coin.

The Latin abbreviation of obolus, ob. was borrowed into Middle English to mean a happeny ½ d and an obale was the ale you could get for ½ d.

That's my 2p worth,

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Richard Walker

The Pilcrow's Long Journey - Ancient Greece To MS Word

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Edited by Richard Walker, Tuesday 17 March 2026 at 14:33

This ¶ is a pilcrow, AKA a paragraph marker. As an experiment, when marking computing assignment with long code passages, I've been using pilcrows to mark the places where I've inserted feedback. The idea is that the student can easily find my comments by searching for this symbol, which is not one that will appear in computer code normally.

I was vaguely aware of this symbol and its uses, paragraphs and footnotes mainly, and though of it as a printer's mark, without any really idea of its history, so I thought I'd look it up, and was quite surprised to find out it goes back to Ancient Greece. Here's a short version of the story, as I understand it.

Greek scribes, writing on papyrus, might draw a horizontal line in the margin, for various reasons, such as marking places where they thought the text might have become corrupted, or places where a new section started. They called this mark 'by-the-side writing', paragraphos (παράγραφος).

This morphed into Gamma Γ for some reason and then in Roman times to K for kaput, 'head', marking the head of a new section).

The Roman alphabet evolved and K was replaced by C, still pronounced as a hard /k/. Scribes added a couple of short vertical lines, I suppose for emphasis, and then to give it even more oomph people started filling the loop of the C in. So the evolution was something like this

This was still called a paragraphos in Latin but in French became pelagraphe and then from that English got pylcrafte, attested from 1440 according to the OED. By 1580 it had become pilcrowe (OED again) which is essentially the modern form. Why 'crow'? Perhaps people felt it looked like crow but who knows?

Meanwhile the symbol which began as a manuscript annotation became a printer's mark with arrival of that technology and then in the modern age is represented by Unicode U+00B6 ¶ . Interestingly Unicode also defines a reverse pilcrow ⁋ (why is it not called a worclip?) and the exotic and beautiful curved stem pilcrow ❡.

And nowadays the pilcrow has found its way to the Microsoft Word Ribbon, where it sits just to the left of Styles. Click on it and all the paragraph marks, tabs, breaks and other formatting marks are displayed. 

And here we end this short history of the pilcrow. As usual Wikipedia has a good article.

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