Bokep
- See moreSee all on Wikipedia
Diple (textual symbol) - Wikipedia
Diple (Ancient Greek: διπλῆ, meaning double, referring to the two lines in the mark >) was a mark used in the margins of ancient Greek manuscripts to draw attention to something in the text. It is sometimes also called antilambda because the sign resembles a Greek capital letter lambda (Λ) turned upon its side. … See more
• Obelism – Editors' marks on manuscripts
• Coronis – Symbol found in ancient Greek papyri (⸎)
• Greater-than sign § E-mail and Markdown – Mathematical symbol for "greater than" See more• Punctuation (Ancient Greek) See more
Wikipedia text under CC-BY-SA license Diple (textual symbol) - Wikiwand
Diple - Wikipedia
Obelism - Wikipedia
List of typographical symbols and punctuation marks - Wikipedia
Aristarchian symbols - Wikiwand
- People also ask
The Long and Fascinating History of Quotation Marks
Jan 30, 2015 · The so-called diple, or “double,” was an arrow-shaped character (>) named for the two strokes of the pen required to draw it, and it was just one of a clutch of proofreading marks devised by a...
Diple (textual symbol)
diple - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
The Diple - Ian Devlin :: Web Developer
Diple (textual symbol) - The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
About: Diple (textual symbol) - DBpedia Association
Aristarchian symbols - Wikipedia
The Ancient Roots of Punctuation - The New Yorker
The Oikofuge: Quotation Marks
Diple - Wikiwand
Diple (textual symbol) - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia
Category:Punctuation - Wikipedia
Diple (textual symbol) - atozwiki.com
List of symbols - Wikipedia
Related searches for Diple (textual symbol) wikipedia