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Interpunct
Interpunct
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·
Interpunct
In UnicodeU+00B7 · MIDDLE DOT (·, ·, ·)
Different from
Different fromU+2027 HYPHENATION POINT

U+2219 BULLET OPERATOR
U+22C5 DOT OPERATOR

U+A78F LATIN LETTER SINOLOGICAL DOT
Related
See alsoU+02D1 ˑ MODIFIER LETTER HALF TRIANGULAR COLON

An interpunct ·, also known as an interpoint,[1] middle dot, middot, or centered dot, is a punctuation mark consisting of a vertically centered dot used for interword separation in Classical Latin. (Word-separating spaces did not appear until some time between 600 and 800 CE.) It appears in a variety of uses in some modern languages.

The multiplication dot or "dot operator" is frequently used in mathematical and scientific notation, and it may differ in appearance from the interpunct.

In written language

[edit]

Various dictionaries use the interpunct (in this context, sometimes called a hyphenation point) to indicate where to split a word and insert a hyphen if the word doesn't fit on the line. There is also a separate Unicode character, U+2027 HYPHENATION POINT.

English

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Bradford's transcription of the Mayflower Compact

In the early modern era, full stops (periods) were sometimes written as interpuncts (for example in the depicted 1646 transcription of the Mayflower Compact).

In British typography, the space dot was once used as the formal decimal point. Its use was advocated by laws and can still be found in some UK-based academic journals such as The Lancet.[2] In the 1960s, this usage was advocated by the School Mathematics Project, and continues to be used, albeit inconsistently, in primary-school mathematics education.[3][4] When the pound sterling was decimalised in 1971, the official advice issued was to write decimal amounts with a raised point (for example, £21·48) and to use a decimal point "on the line" only when typesetting constraints made it unavoidable.[5] However, this usage had already been declining since the 1968 ruling by the Ministry of Technology to use the full stop as the decimal point,[6] not only because of that ruling but also because the standard UK keyboard layout (for typewriters and computers) has only the full stop.

In the artificially constructed Shavian alphabet, interpuncts are used instead of capitalization as the marker of proper nouns. The dot is placed at the beginning of a word.

Catalan

[edit]
Metro station Paral·lel in Barcelona

The punt volat ("flying point") is used in Catalan between two Ls in cases where each belongs to a separate syllable, for example cel·la, "cell". This distinguishes such "geminate Ls" (ela geminada), which are pronounced [ɫː], from "double L" (doble ela), which are written without the flying point and are pronounced [ʎ]. In situations where the flying point is unavailable, periods (as in col.lecció) or hyphens (as in col-lecció) are frequently used as substitutes, but this is tolerated rather than encouraged.

Historically, medieval Catalan also used the symbol · as a marker for certain elisions, much like the modern apostrophe (see Occitan below) and hyphenations.

There is no separate physical keyboard layout for Catalan: the flying point can be typed using ⇧ Shift+3 in the Spanish (Spain) layout or with Option +⇧ Shift+9 on a US English layout. On a mobile phone with a Catalan keyboard layout, the geminate L with a flying dot appears when holding down the L key. It appears in Unicode as the pre-composed letters Ŀ (U+013F) and ŀ (U+0140), but they are compatibility characters and are not frequently used or recommended.[7][a]

Chinese

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The interpunct or "partition sign" is used in Chinese (which generally lacks spacing between characters) to mark divisions in words transliterated from phonogram languages, particularly names. Some fonts and software render U+00B7 · MIDDLE DOT as double-width if it is between double-width characters, Chinese standards recommend half-width between Arabic numerals.[8] In Taiwan, the formal standard, as defined by CNS 11643, historically specified U+2027 HYPHENATION POINT,[9] while U+30FB KATAKANA MIDDLE DOT should be primarily used in Japanese contexts for separating Katakana words. When the Chinese text is romanized, the partition sign is simply replaced by a standard space or other appropriate punctuation. Thus, William Shakespeare is written as 威廉·莎士比亞 (Wēilián Shāshìbǐyà) and George W. Bush as 乔治·W. 布什 (喬治·W. 布殊; Qiáozhì W. Bùshí).[10][11] Titles and other translated words are not similarly marked: Genghis Khan and Elizabeth II are simply 成吉思汗 (Chéngjísī hán) and 伊丽莎白二世 (伊麗莎白二世; Yīlìshābái èrshì).

The partition sign is also used to separate book and chapter titles when they are mentioned consecutively: book first and then chapter.

Hokkien

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In Pe̍h-ōe-jī for Taiwanese Hokkien, middle dot is often used as a workaround for the dot above right diacritic, since most early encoding systems did not support this diacritic. This is now encoded as U+0358 ◌͘ COMBINING DOT ABOVE RIGHT (see ). Unicode did not support this diacritic until June 2005. Newer fonts often support it natively; however, the practice of using middle dot still exists. Historically, it was derived in the late 19th century from an older barred-o with curly tail as an adaptation to the typewriter.

Tibetan

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In Tibetan the interpunct, called tsek (ཙེག་), is used as a morpheme delimiter.

Ethiopic

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The Geʽez (Ethiopic) script traditionally separates words with an interpunct of two vertically aligned dots, like a colon, but with larger dots: U+1361 ETHIOPIC WORDSPACE. (For example ገድለ፡ወለተ፡ጴጥሮስ). Starting in the late 19th century the use of such punctuation has largely fallen out of use in favor of whitespace, except in formal hand-written or liturgical texts. In Eritrea the character may be used as a comma.[12]

Franco-Provençal

[edit]

In Franco-Provençal (or Arpitan), the interpunct is used in order to distinguish the following graphemes:

  • ch·, pronounced [ʃ], versus ch, pronounced [ts]
  • , pronounced [ʒ], versus j, pronounced [dz]
  • before e, i, pronounced [ʒ], versus g before e, i, pronounced [dz]

French

[edit]

In modern French, the interpunct is sometimes used for gender-neutral writing, as in les salarié·e·s for les salariés et les salariées ("the male employees and the female employees").[citation needed]

Greek

[edit]

Ancient Greek lacked spacing or interpuncts but instead ran all the letters together. By Late Antiquity, various marks were used to separate words, particularly the Greek comma.[13]

In modern Greek, the ano teleia mark (Greek: άνω τελεία, romanizedánō teleía, lit.'upper stop'; also known as άνω στιγμή, áno stigmí) is the infrequently-encountered Greek semicolon and is properly romanized as such.[14] In Greek text, Unicode provides the code point U+0387 · GREEK ANO TELEIA;[15] however, it is canonically equivalent to the interpunct.[13]

The Hellenistic scholars of Alexandria first developed the mark for a function closer to the comma, before it fell out of use and was then repurposed for its present role.[13]

Japanese

[edit]

Interpuncts are often used to separate transcribed foreign names or words written in katakana. For example, "Beautiful Sunday" becomes ビューティフル・サンデー (Byūtifuru·Sandē). A middle dot is also sometimes used to separate lists in Japanese instead of the Japanese comma. Dictionaries and grammar lessons in Japanese sometimes also use a similar symbol to separate a verb suffix from its root. While some fonts may render the Japanese middle dot as a square under great magnification, this is not a defining property of the middle dot that is used in China or Japan.

However, the Japanese writing system usually does not use space or punctuation to separate words (though the mixing of katakana, kanji and hiragana gives some indication of word boundary).

In Japanese typography, there exist two Unicode code points:

  • U+30FB KATAKANA MIDDLE DOT, with a fixed width that is the same as most kana characters, known as fullwidth.
  • U+FF65 HALFWIDTH KATAKANA MIDDLE DOT

The interpunct also has a number of other uses in Japanese, including the following: to separate titles, names and positions: 課長補佐・鈴木 (Assistant Section Head · Suzuki); as a decimal point when writing numbers in kanji: 三・一四一五九二 (3.141 592); as a slash when writing for "or" in abbreviations: 月・水・金曜日 (Mon/Wed/Friday); in place of hyphens, dashes and colons when writing vertically; and in song lyrics to add a brief pause between syllables.

Korean

[edit]

Interpuncts are used in written Korean to denote a list of two or more words, similarly to how a slash (/) is used to juxtapose words in many other languages. In this role it also functions in a similar way to the English en dash, as in 미·소관계, "American–Soviet relations". The use of interpuncts has declined in years of digital typography and especially in place of slashes, but, in the strictest sense, a slash cannot replace a middle dot in Korean typography.

U+318D HANGUL LETTER ARAEA (아래아) is used more than a middle dot when an interpunct is to be used in Korean typography, though araea is technically not a punctuation symbol but actually an obsolete Hangul jamo. Because araea is a full-width letter, it looks better than middle dot between Hangul. In addition, it is drawn like the middle dot in Windows default Korean fonts such as Batang.

Latin

[edit]

The interpunct (interpunctus) was regularly used in classical Latin to separate words. In addition to the most common round form, inscriptions sometimes use a small equilateral triangle for the interpunct, pointing either up or down. It may also appear as a mid-line comma, similar to the Greek practice of the time. The interpunct fell out of use c. 200 CE, and Latin was then written scripta continua for several centuries.[citation needed]

Occitan

[edit]

In Occitan, especially in the Gascon dialect, the interpunct (punt interior, literally, "inner dot", or ponch naut for "high / upper point") is used to distinguish the following graphemes:

  • s·h, pronounced [s.h], versus sh, pronounced [ʃ], for example, in des·har 'to undo' vs deishar 'to leave'
  • n·h, pronounced [n.h], versus nh, pronounced [ɲ], for example in in·hèrn 'hell' vs vinha 'vineyard'

Although it is considered to be a spelling error, a period is frequently used when a middle dot is unavailable: des.har, in.hèrn, which is the case for French keyboard layout.

In modern editions of Old Occitan texts, the apostrophe and interpunct are used to denote certain elisions that were not originally marked. The apostrophe is used with proclitic forms and the interpunct is used with enclitic forms:

  • que·l (que lo, that the) versus qu'el (that he)
  • From Bertran de Born's Ab joi mou lo vers e·l comens (translated by James H. Donalson):

Old Irish

[edit]

In many linguistic works discussing Old Irish (but not in actual Old Irish manuscripts), the interpunct is used to separate a pretonic preverbal element from the stressed syllable of the verb, e.g. do·beir "gives". It is also used in citing the verb forms used after such preverbal elements (the prototonic forms), e.g. ·beir "carries", to distinguish them from forms used without preverbs, e.g. beirid "carries".[16] In other works, the hyphen (do-beir, -beir) or colon (do:beir, :beir) may be used for this purpose.

Runes

[edit]

Runic texts use either an interpunct-like or a colon-like punctuation mark to separate words. There are two Unicode characters dedicated for this:

  • U+16EB RUNIC SINGLE PUNCTUATION
  • U+16EC RUNIC MULTIPLE PUNCTUATION

In mathematics and science

[edit]
Multiplication dot
In UnicodeU+22C5 DOT OPERATOR (⋅)
Related
See alsoU+2219 BULLET OPERATOR

Up to the mid twentieth century, and sporadically even much later,[4] the interpunct could be found used as the decimal point in British publications, such as tables of constants (e.g., "π = 3·14159").[3]

In publications conforming to the standards of the International System of Units, as well as the multiplication sign (×), the centered dot (dot operator) can be used as a multiplication sign.[citation needed] Only a comma or full stop (period) may be used as a decimal marker.[citation needed] The centered dot can be used when multiplying units, as in m·kg·s−2 for the newton expressed in terms of SI base units.[citation needed] In the United States, the use of a centered dot for the multiplication of numbers or values of quantities is discouraged by NIST.[17]

In mathematics, a small middle dot can be used to represent multiplication; for example, for multiplying by . When dealing with scalars, it is interchangeable with the multiplication sign (×), as long as the multiplication sign is between numerals such that it would not be mistaken as variable . For instance, means the same thing as . However, when dealing with vectors, the dot operator denotes a dot product (e.g. , a scalar), which is distinct from the cross product (e.g. , a vector).

The symbol is sometimes used to denote the "AND" relationship in formal logic and Boolean algebra, which can be seen as a special case of multiplication.

Another usage of this symbol in mathematics is with functions, where the dot is used as a placeholder for a function argument, in order to distinguish between the (general form of the) function itself and the value or a specific form of a function evaluated at a given point or with given specifications.[18][19] For example, denotes the function , and denotes a partial application, where the first two arguments are given and the third argument shall take any valid value on its domain.

In computing, the middle dot is usually displayed (but not printed) to indicate white space in various software applications such as word processing, graphic design, web layout, desktop publishing or software development programs. In some word processors, interpuncts are used to denote not only hard space or space characters, but also sometimes used to indicate a space when put in paragraph format to show indentations and spaces. This allows the user to see where white space is located in the document and what sizes of white space are used, since normally white space is invisible so tabs, spaces, non-breaking spaces and such are indistinguishable from one another.

In chemistry, the middle dot is used to separate the parts of formulas of addition compounds, mixture salts or solvates (typically hydrates), such as of copper(II) sulphate pentahydrate, CuSO4·5H2O. The middle dot should not be surrounded by spaces when indicating a chemical adduct.[20]

The middot as a letter

[edit]

A middot may be used as a consonant or modifier letter, rather than as punctuation, in transcription systems and in language orthographies. For such uses Unicode provides the code point U+A78F LATIN LETTER SINOLOGICAL DOT.[21]

In Americanist phonetic notation, the middot is a more common variant of the colon ⟨꞉⟩ used to indicate vowel length. It may be called a half-colon in such usage. Graphically, it may be high in the letter space (the top dot of the colon) or centered as the interpunct. From Americanist notation, it has been adopted into the orthographies of several languages, such as Washo.

In the writings of Franz Boas, the middot was used for palatal or palatalized consonants, e.g. ⟨kꞏ⟩ for IPA [c].

In the Sinological tradition of the 36 initials, the onset 影 (typically reconstructed as a glottal stop) may be transliterated with a middot ⟨ꞏ⟩, and the onset 喻 (typically reconstructed as a null onset) with an apostrophe ⟨ʼ⟩. Conventions vary, however, and it is common for 影 to be transliterated with the apostrophe. These conventions are used both for Chinese itself and for other scripts of China, such as ʼPhags-pa[22] and Jurchen.

In the Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, a middle dot ⟨ᐧ⟩ indicates a syllable medial ⟨w⟩ in Cree and Ojibwe, ⟨y⟩ or ⟨yu⟩ in some of the Athapascan languages, and a syllable medial ⟨s⟩ in Blackfoot. However, depending on the writing tradition, the middle dot may appear after the syllable it modifies (which is found in the Western style) or before the syllable it modifies (which is found in the Northern and Eastern styles). In Unicode, the middle dot is encoded both as independent glyph U+1427 CANADIAN SYLLABICS FINAL MIDDLE DOT or as part of a pre-composed letter, such as in U+143C CANADIAN SYLLABICS PWI. In the Carrier syllabics subset, the middle dot Final indicates a glottal stop, but a centered dot diacritic on [ə]-position letters transform the vowel value to [i], for example: U+1650 CANADIAN SYLLABICS CARRIER SE, U+1652 CANADIAN SYLLABICS CARRIER SI.

Similar symbols

[edit]
Symbol Character Entity Numeric Entity Unicode Code Point LaTeX[23] Notes
· ·
·
·
· U+00B7 MIDDLE DOT \textperiodcentered The interpunct
ˑ ˑ U+02D1 MODIFIER LETTER HALF TRIANGULAR COLON IPA interpunct symbol: the triangular middot.
· · U+0387 GREEK ANO TELEIA Greek ánō stigmē
ּ ּ U+05BC HEBREW POINT DAGESH OR MAPPIQ Hebrew point dagesh or mapiq
᛫ U+16EB RUNIC SINGLE PUNCTUATION Runic punctuation
• • U+2022 BULLET \textbullet bullet, often used to mark list items
‧ U+2027 HYPHENATION POINT hyphenation point (dictionaries)
∘ ∘ U+2218 RING OPERATOR \circ ring operator (mathematics)
∙ U+2219 BULLET OPERATOR \bullet bullet operator (mathematics)
⋅ ⋅ U+22C5 DOT OPERATOR \cdot, \cdotp dot operator (mathematics)
⏺ U+23FA BLACK CIRCLE FOR RECORD black circle for record
● U+25CF BLACK CIRCLE
◦ U+25E6 WHITE BULLET hollow bullet
⚫ U+26AB MEDIUM CIRCLE BLACK medium black circle
⦁ U+2981 Z NOTATION SPOT symbol used by the Z notation[24]
⸰ U+2E30 RING POINT Avestan punctuation mark
⸱ U+2E31 WORD SEPARATOR MIDDLE DOT word separator (Avestan and other scripts)
⸳ U+2E33 RAISED DOT vertical position between full stop and middle dot
・ U+30FB KATAKANA MIDDLE DOT fullwidth katakana middle dot
ꞏ U+A78F LATIN LETTER SINOLOGICAL DOT as a letter
・ U+FF65 HALFWIDTH KATAKANA MIDDLE DOT halfwidth katakana middle dot
𐄁 𐄁 U+10101 AEGEAN WORD SEPARATOR DOT word separator for Aegean scripts[25] (Linear A and Linear B)

Characters in the Symbol column above may not render correctly in all browsers.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The interpunct (·), also known as the middle dot or interpoint, is a mark consisting of a small, vertically centered dot that originated as a means of word separation in ancient and continues to serve various functions in modern and notation. The name "interpunct" stems from the Latin interpunctus, a past participle derived from inter- ("between") and pungere ("to prick" or "to point"), literally meaning "pointed between," which describes its role in inserting points amid continuous text. In writing, particularly in inscriptions on monuments and public works from the and Empire (circa 500 BCE to 500 CE), the interpunct was the principal visual aid for denoting word boundaries in —a style of unspaced text that lacked modern inter-word gaps. It typically appeared as a single mid-height dot but could take the form of double or triple dots for emphasis, marking pauses or divisions, and represented one of the earliest systematic approaches to in Western writing systems. With the adoption of word spacing by Irish monks in the (around the 7th–8th centuries CE), the interpunct largely faded from general use in Latin and scripts, though it persisted in some epigraphic traditions. In contemporary contexts, the interpunct functions as a operator in mathematical and scientific expressions, such as 23=62 \cdot 3 = 6, to avoid confusion with xx or the letter xx. It also denotes breaks in dictionaries (e.g., "in·ter·punct"). It served historically as the preferred in British typography until the mid-20th century. In Catalan, the middle dot (known as the punt volat) is used between two 'l's (e.g., col·lecció) to indicate and separate syllables.

Overview and History

Definition and Etymology

The interpunct (·) is a punctuation mark consisting of a small, vertically centered dot employed for purposes such as separating words, denoting multiplication, or providing emphasis within text. It differs from the baseline-positioned period (.) at the bottom of a line and from bullet points (•), which are larger and typically used to introduce list items. In the Unicode standard, the is encoded as U+00B7 MIDDLE DOT and classified under the category "Punctuation, Other" (Po), indicating its role as a non-letter, non-number separator in text processing. The term "interpunct" originates from the Latin "interpunctus," the past participle of "interpungere," meaning "to interpoint" or "to punctuate between," literally denoting an "interspaced point." This nomenclature first appears in references to ancient Roman texts, where it described the dot's function in dividing words, a practice with roots in earlier Greek scripts. Visually, the interpunct is positioned at the midline of the text, aligned with the —the height of lowercase letters such as "x"—to ensure optical centering within the body of a . In historical typefaces, including old-style serifs like those derived from Claude Garamond's 16th-century designs, the appears as a compact, refined dot that harmonizes with surrounding characters without disrupting .

Historical Origins and Evolution

The interpunct, a vertically centered dot used for word separation, appeared in Latin inscriptions from the 3rd century BCE onward, particularly in the Roman Republic period. This practice helped distinguish word boundaries in scriptio continua, the continuous writing style common in early epigraphy, though its use was primarily confined to formal public texts such as decrees and dedications. By the 1st century CE, the interpunct had become established in Latin writing, serving both word separation and syllabic division, especially in poetry where rhythmic structure was paramount. Roman rhetoricians described punctuation marks including points for intermediate pauses, which aided scansion in verse by highlighting syllable breaks without disrupting the flow— for instance, in dactylic hexameter lines where elision or enclisis could obscure boundaries. This usage reflected a broader Roman adaptation of epigraphic conventions, as evidenced in inscriptions like those from Pompeii and early manuscripts, where the dot appeared between words to prevent ambiguity in legal and literary texts. Interpuncts thus supported the quantitative meter of Latin poetry, ensuring accurate pronunciation during public performance. During the medieval period, the interpunct persisted in manuscripts as a versatile mark for pauses or divisions, transitioning from stone to amid the rise of scriptoria in monasteries. Its evolution accelerated in the with the advent of printing, notably through Aldus Manutius's in , which produced the first major Greek editions using . In his 1495–1498 edition of Aristotle's works, Manutius incorporated accents and breathings to replicate classical , enhancing readability for humanist scholars studying original texts. This innovation bridged ancient epigraphic practices with early modern , standardizing symbols in printed classics and influencing subsequent editions across . In the 19th and 20th centuries, the interpunct underwent further standardization in typography, driven by mechanical typesetting innovations like the , invented by Ottmar Mergenthaler in 1884, which cast lines of type including matrices for symbols such as the middle dot. This facilitated its inclusion in newspapers and books, though its primary role shifted from word separation to or lists. International efforts culminated in ISO standards, with the interpunct codified as U+00B7 (MIDDLE DOT) in (ISO/IEC 10646), ensuring consistent digital representation across global typography systems. Key events included its decline in English printing after the , as became universal and the symbol was relegated to specialized uses, supplanted by evolving norms in grammars like those of Robert Lowth. Conversely, it persisted in due to 19th-century Renaixença reforms, where the punt volat was formalized to distinguish geminate ll (e.g., cel·la), a convention ratified at the International Congress of the Catalan Language to unify regional variants.

Uses in Written Languages

In Classical and Ancient Scripts

In inscriptions, word division was occasionally marked by a high-placed dot or multiple dots positioned at mid-height or above the line of text, serving as an early form of to clarify boundaries in . This practice, evident from the Archaic period onward, helped distinguish words in monumental and epigraphic contexts where continuous writing predominated. By the Hellenistic era, particularly in papyri from the BCE, the symbol evolved toward a low-point mark resembling a , known as the hypodiastole, which functioned specifically to separate words and prevent misreading of compound forms or contractions. In Latin , the interpunct—a medial dot or occasionally a small —appeared prominently from the Republican period to mark breaks and word divisions, enhancing on stone monuments and metal tablets. This convention persisted into the Imperial era, as seen in the dedicatory inscription on the base of (completed 113 CE), where the text reads "SENATVS·POPVLVSQVE·ROMANVS" and similar phrases, using the dot to separate key terms like "SENATVS" and "POPVLVSQVE." Early manuscripts of classical authors such as Virgil's and (late 1st century BCE) generally employed without interpuncts, though later copies and inscribed quotations from his works occasionally incorporated dots for clarity in public displays. The script, used for from the 4th to 6th centuries CE, primarily separated words with physical spaces or short vertical lines along the edge of stones, reflecting its linear, notch-based design rather than dotted . However, in some Scottish adaptations of Ogham during the early medieval period, drew from runic influences, employing double or triple colons (-:- or ·:·) as dividers, as observed on 6th-century inscribed stones like those in the Pictish tradition. In runic inscriptions (2nd–8th centuries CE), word separation was inconsistent but often achieved through single or multiple dots, including double or triple variants like ·:·, positioned at mid-height to delineate phrases on artifacts such as bracteates and memorial stones. This practice, though not standardized, appears in longer texts like the 5th-century CE Vadstena bracteate, where dots clarify syntactic breaks in the continuous rune sequence. Specific artifacts illustrate these conventions: the Greek section of the (196 BCE) exemplifies the absence of interpuncts in Ptolemaic inscriptions, relying on without dots or spaces for its 54 lines of decree text. In contrast, Pompeian from the CE, such as electoral notices in the (CIL IV), frequently employed interpuncts to separate words in informal scrawls, as in phrases like "A·POMPILIVS·HIRCVS·ROGO" advertising a , aiding quick on public walls.

In Romance Languages

In Catalan, the interpunct, known as the punt volat, serves as a mandatory orthographic marker for separating hiatus or boundaries, particularly in cases where vowels or consonants might otherwise form a or palatal sound, as in "a·punt" (meaning "ready" or "to the point"). This convention was standardized during the amid the Renaixença cultural revival and formalized by the Institut d'Estudis Catalans (IEC) in its orthographic norms, ensuring clarity in pronunciation and division. The IEC's Ortografia catalana specifies its use to modify digraphs like ll into l·l (ela geminada), preventing misreading as the palatal [ʎ] sound, and it appears prominently in official documents such as the 1978 Catalan (Estatut d'Autonomia), where words like "col·lectivitat" and "intel·lectuals" employ it for precise separation. In French, the interpunct has an archaic role in for denoting breaks, as evidenced in 19th-century dictionaries like Émile Littré's Dictionnaire de la langue française (1863–1877), where it divides words such as "in·ter·punc·tion" to guide pronunciation. Modern usage is rare in , deemed obsolete by the Académie Française's orthographic guidelines, which prioritize hyphens or spaces for division without referencing the interpunct as current practice. However, it persists in (Arpitan) dialects for vowel separation in hiatus, distinguishing sounds in regional orthographies to avoid assimilation, such as clarifying adjacent vowels in words from or Valdôtain varieties. Occitan employs the interpunct, termed punt interior or ponch interior, akin to Catalan, to separate elements in compound words and mark hiatus for syllabic clarity, exemplified by "un·òme" (a man), where it prevents fusion between the article and . This practice traces historical roots to the orthography of medieval poetry (12th–13th centuries), where it facilitated rhythmic and elision avoidance in Provençal and Gascon dialects, and it remains codified in contemporary norms by bodies like the Institut d'Estudis . In modern liturgical Latin, the interpunct endures in select editions of the , such as those prepared for , to delineate word boundaries and enhance during , preserving ancient scriptural clarity without altering the text itself.

In Asian Languages

In Chinese, the interpunct, known as the jiàngé hào (间隔号), functions primarily as a separator for components of foreign names or transliterations of non-Han ethnic names. For example, the politician Nur Bekri's name is rendered as 努尔·白克力 to distinguish from . This mark appears in horizontal text centered between characters and rotates 90 degrees clockwise in vertical writing modes, maintaining its utility across formats. The interpunct's inclusion in the GB 2312-1980 national standard for formalized its role as a separator dot, ensuring compatibility in and . In texts such as the , original manuscripts lacked , but modern editions in vertical format often employ dots—including the interpunct—for enumerating list items to clarify , reflecting adaptations from traditional practices. In Japanese, the katakana middle dot (・, U+30FB katakana chūten) separates foreign loanwords or compound terms written in , compensating for the script's lack of spaces. This prevents ambiguity in phrases like ビューティフル・サンデー (""), where it denotes word breaks. Its usage gained prominence post-World War II through orthographic reforms that standardized for gairaigo (foreign borrowings), promoting clarity in an increasingly globalized lexicon. In Korean, the middle dot (중점, jungjeom, ·) mirrors Japanese conventions for abbreviating foreign terms or separating parts of international names in , such as · for " of America." This practice emerged under Japanese colonial influence (), when modern systems were introduced, and was later integrated into standardized Korean orthography during 20th-century language reforms. In Tibetan Uchen script, a dot-like mark called the tsheg (་, U+0F0B) serves as a separator between words, a function akin to the interpunct's delineative role elsewhere. Evidence from 7th–10th-century shows early forms of this separator evolving to aid readability in continuous scripts without spaces.

In Other Language Scripts

In the Ethiopic script, derived from ancient Ge'ez, the wordspace character (U+1361 ፡), a double vertical dot resembling an evolved , functions as the primary word separator in and Tigrinya writing systems. This punctuation mark maintains continuity with classical Ge'ez traditions, where it replaced earlier vertical bars used in pre-Aksumite and Aksumite inscriptions dating back to the CE. Historical Ethiopic Bible editions, such as those printed in the 19th and 20th centuries for the , prominently feature this wordspace to delineate words in Ge'ez texts, facilitating in liturgical and scriptural contexts. In modern usage, it underscores the script's role in post-colonial African linguistic preservation, where indigenous adaptations of Ethiopic support in languages like amid influences from European orthographies. In the romanization of (Min Nan Chinese), particularly developed by 19th-century Presbyterian missionaries, the middle dot (U+00B7 ·) serves to separate syllables in written forms lacking spaces, aiding pronunciation amid complex rules. This convention appears in early church materials, including hymnals and catechisms produced in and Amoy (Xiamen), where it clarified tonal shifts in connected speech for vernacular worship. Modern Greek polytonic occasionally employs a raised middle dot (ano teleia, U+0387 ·) as , distinct from but typographically akin to the interpunct, though its use for indicating breathings remains primarily historical and rare in contemporary texts. Presbyterian texts in from the late onward, such as those by Thomas Barclay, exemplify the middle dot's integration into Hokkien for educational and religious purposes.

Uses in Mathematics and Science

Mathematical Notation

In mathematical notation, the interpunct, also known as the middle dot (·), primarily functions as a operator, particularly in algebraic expressions to denote the product of scalars or to clarify operations where might cause , such as with variables resembling the letter "x". For instance, the expression 23=62 \cdot 3 = 6 explicitly indicates without confusion. This usage contrasts with implicit via (e.g., $2x$), which is preferred in many contexts for brevity, but the interpunct ensures precision in inline formulas. The interpunct's adoption as a multiplication symbol traces back to , who introduced it in a 1698 letter to , proposing the raised dot to replace the "X" and avoid its resemblance to the variable "x". Although initially met with resistance, the notation gained traction in the and became more standardized in 19th-century mathematical texts, particularly with the expansion of algebraic and analytical methods, as documented in historical surveys of . By the mid-1800s, it appeared routinely in European works on arithmetic and higher , reflecting a shift toward clearer, less ambiguous operators. In and vector analysis, the interpunct denotes the (or scalar product) of two vectors, ab\mathbf{a} \cdot \mathbf{b}, which yields a scalar value representing the cosine of the angle between them scaled by their magnitudes. This operation, introduced by in his 1881–1884 lecture notes Elements of Vector Analysis, distinguishes the commutative scalar result from the a×b\mathbf{a} \times \mathbf{b}, which produces a vector to both inputs and is non-commutative. Gibbs's notation, using a baseline dot (α.β) for the "direct product," evolved into the centered interpunct in later publications, such as Edwin Bidwell Wilson's 1901 textbook based on Gibbs's lectures. It is not employed for exponentiation, where the (^) or superscript notation is standard (e.g., 232^3 for $8),topreservedistinctionbetweenoperations.Inmoderntypesetting,theinterpunctisrenderedin[LaTeX](/page/Latex)viathecommand), to preserve distinction between operations. In modern typesetting, the interpunct is rendered in [LaTeX](/page/Latex) via the command \cdot$, ensuring consistent spacing and alignment in mathematical documents.

Scientific and Technical Applications

In physics, the interpunct, or middle dot, has historically served as a in some scientific notations, particularly in older British texts where numbers like 3·14 were used instead of the modern period or comma. This practice persisted in mathematical and scientific publications up to the mid-20th century to distinguish it from marks. In the (SI), the middle dot is the preferred symbol for indicating between unit symbols, such as meters per second expressed as ms1m \cdot s^{-1}, to avoid ambiguity with other operators like division. This convention ensures clarity in expressing compound units, where the dot is placed at mid-height relative to the symbols. Guides such as the NIST explicitly recommend the middle dot ( U+00B7) for this purpose, aligning with international standards. In chemistry, the interpunct denotes the separation of components in addition compounds, solvates, or hydrates, such as copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate written as CuSO4_4·5H2_2O, indicating loosely associated subunits without specifying exact bonding. For coordination compounds, it may separate the complex ion from counterions in certain notations, though brackets are more common for the coordination sphere itself. The IUPAC Recommendations 2005 (Red Book) outline this use for denoting addition compounds and mixtures. Additionally, the middle dot represents unpaired electrons in free radicals, placed adjacent to the atomic or molecular symbol, as in ·OH for the hydroxyl radical, to indicate the site of highest spin density. Historically, early chemical tables employed dots for separating elements or compounds, as seen in Lavoisier's 1789 Traité élémentaire de chimie, where like interpuncts aided in organizing lists of simple substances. The IUPAC Recommendations 2005 permit optional use of the middle dot in such contexts for clarity in inorganic formulas. Technical standards, such as ISO 80000-1 (2009), specify the middle dot as the symbol for in physical quantities and units, recommending it over other signs to maintain consistency in international scientific communication. This guideline supports its role in denoting products of quantities without implying numerical .

The Interpunct as a Distinct Character

In Phonetic and Syllabic Systems

In the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), the interpunct serves as the standard symbol for marking syllable breaks within words, allowing precise transcription of phonological structures. For instance, the English word "apple" is rendered as /ˈæp.əl/, where the interpunct divides the initial consonant-vowel cluster from the following schwa-initial syllable. This convention dates to the IPA's initial publication in 1888, established by the International Phonetic Association to standardize phonetic notation across languages. The 1993 revision of the IPA, formalized at the Convention and elaborated in the 1999 Handbook of the , reaffirmed the interpunct's role in division while introducing guidelines for its electronic rendering to accommodate digital typography and ensure cross-platform consistency in transcriptions. This update emphasized the symbol's utility in narrow phonetic analyses, where boundaries influence sound realization, such as in cases of ambisyllabicity. In syllabic romanization systems like Pe̍h-ōe-jī (POJ) for Hokkien, developed by 19th-century European missionaries such as Thomas Barclay, the interpunct functions as a practical substitute for the right-side dot diacritic on the vowel "o͘," denoting the open-mid back rounded vowel /ɔ/. This adaptation arose from constraints in early printing and encoding technologies, enabling accurate representation of tonal and syllabic distinctions in Taiwanese Hokkien texts without specialized fonts. For example, words like "go͘" (meaning "five") rely on this middle dot to preserve phonetic fidelity in missionary-era Bibles and grammars. Linguistic studies of Tibetan phonology frequently utilize the interpunct in IPA-based transcriptions to analyze sandhi processes, where tone and consonant assimilation occur across syllables. In Lhasa Tibetan, for example, analyses of tone sandhi rules employ notations like /mə·tɕʰi/ for "medicine" to illustrate how high-tone syllables trigger low-tone shifts in adjacent units, revealing the language's prosodic patterns in connected speech. Such applications draw on the IPA's conventions to document historical sound changes from Old Tibetan.

Computing and Typography

In computing, the interpunct is encoded in Unicode as U+00B7 MIDDLE DOT, part of the block, ensuring compatibility with encoding via the byte sequence C2 B7. In , it can be represented using the named entity · or the decimal entity ·, providing fallbacks for legacy systems that may not fully support Unicode rendering. Historically, the interpunct was absent from the 7-bit ASCII standard established in the and revised through the , limiting its use in early digital text to approximations like periods or hyphens. Its formal inclusion came with the ISO/IEC 8859-1 standard in 1987, where it appears at hexadecimal B7 (decimal 183), enabling broader adoption in Western European character sets for text processing and display. Keyboard input for the interpunct varies by platform. On Windows, it is entered using the Alt code 0183 on the . In Unix-like systems such as , the sequence (often mapped to the right ) followed by period then period produces U+00B7. On mobile devices, access depends on the keyboard app; for example, in , it appears in the symbols palette under numbers, while Android's offers it via long-press on the period key or handwriting input. In , the interpunct is designed as a vertically centered dot, typically aligned to the for optical balance rather than the baseline, distinguishing it from period marks. Fonts like Adobe Minion Pro incorporate specific pairs for the interpunct in abbreviations such as "U.S.A.", reducing space between the dot and adjacent letters (e.g., -50 to -100 units) to prevent visual gaps while maintaining readability. In , baseline alignment can pose challenges, as the interpunct's centered positioning may shift relative to surrounding text in inline contexts, often requiring CSS adjustments like vertical-align: middle to ensure consistent height alignment across browsers. Modern rendering issues persist, particularly in PDF generation, where libraries like react-pdf may fail to display U+00B7 correctly, substituting it with placeholders or omitting it due to incomplete glyph support, unlike more reliable rendering in browsers. For centering in web layouts, CSS properties such as text-align: center handle horizontal positioning effectively, though vertical inconsistencies between PDF exports and views can arise from differing font embedding standards.

Similar Symbols and Distinctions

The interpunct (·, U+00B7) is visually similar to the bullet point (•, U+2022) but serves a distinct typographical purpose; the bullet is larger, bolder, and employed as a graphic marker to introduce items in lists or for itemization, whereas the interpunct is smaller, more refined, and centered for separating words or syllables without emphasizing structure. In , the interpunct may resemble the multiplication dot or dot operator (⋅, U+22C5), which denotes or the of vectors, but the two differ in Unicode encoding and contextual application—the interpunct functions as for clarity in text, while the mathematical dot avoids ambiguity in expressions like radicals, where is preferred, as in ab\sqrt{ab}
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