Quotation marks: Difference between revisions

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'''Quotation marks''' also called, less formally, ''quotes'' or ''speech marks'' (“...” or ‘...’ or «...», etc.) are [[punctuation]] marks organized in pairs, set at the beginning and the end of a [[quotation]] and, likewise, at the beginning and the end of any passage with a special sense, a special use or a special form.
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'''Quotation marks''' also called, less formally, ''quotes'' or ''speech marks'' ('''“...”''' or '''‘...’''' or '''«...»''', etc.) are [[punctuation]] marks organized in pairs, set at the beginning and the end of a [[quotation]] and, likewise, at the beginning and the end of any passage with a special sense, a special use or a special form.


The passage between quotation marks may vary considerably in size, ranging form a single word to several paragraphs.
The passage between quotation marks may vary considerably in size, ranging form a single word to several paragraphs.


Quotation marks may have differing shapes and layouts depending on the language:
Quotation marks may have differing shapes and layouts depending on the language:
* “...”
* '''“...”'''
* ‘...’
* '''‘...’'''
* «...» (guillemets)
* '''«...»''' (guillemets)
* « ... »
* '''« ... »'''
* „...‟
* '''„...‟'''
* ,...‘
* ''',...‘'''
* »...«
* '''»...«'''
* ”...”
* '''”...”'''
* »...»
* '''»...»'''
* etc.
* etc.
The shapes of quotation marks differ generally at the beginning ('''“...''', '''‘...''', '''«...''') and the end ('''...”''', '''...’''', '''...»'''). However, in a neglected typography, in typewriters and in many publishing softwares, some differentiated shapes such as '''“...”''' and '''‘...’''' (called “smart quotes”) are replaced by uniform, straight shapes such as '''"..."''' and ''''...'''' (called “dumb quotes”).
Sometimes, inner quotation marks may be inserted within outer quotation marks. In this case, the outer pair has the same form as other quotation marks of the text, whereas the inner pair has in general a different form. For instance:
: “Mark said ‘hello’ this morning.”
: ‘Mark said “hello” this morning.’


The following table<ref>Extracted from Wikipedia—enhancement is welcome.</ref> summerizes various uses in various languages.
The following table<ref>Extracted from Wikipedia—enhancement is welcome.</ref> summerizes various uses in various languages.
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The shapes of quotation marks differ generally at the beginning (“..., ‘..., «...) and the end (...”, ...’, ...»). However, in a neglected typography, in typewriters and in many publishing softwares, some differentiated shapes such as “...” and ‘...’ (called “smart quotes”) are replaced by uniform, straight shapes such as "..." and '...' (called “dumb quotes”).
Sometimes, inner quotation marks may be inserted within outer quotation marks. In this case, the outer pair has the same form as other quotation marks of the text, whereas the inner pair has in general a different form. For instance:
: “Mark said ‘hello’ this morning.”
: ‘Mark said “hello” this morning.’


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 16:53, 28 July 2011

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Quotation marks also called, less formally, quotes or speech marks (“...” or ‘...’ or «...», etc.) are punctuation marks organized in pairs, set at the beginning and the end of a quotation and, likewise, at the beginning and the end of any passage with a special sense, a special use or a special form.

The passage between quotation marks may vary considerably in size, ranging form a single word to several paragraphs.

Quotation marks may have differing shapes and layouts depending on the language:

  • “...”
  • ‘...’
  • «...» (guillemets)
  • « ... »
  • „...‟
  • ,...‘
  • »...«
  • ”...”
  • »...»
  • etc.


The shapes of quotation marks differ generally at the beginning (“..., ‘..., «...) and the end (...”, ...’, ...»). However, in a neglected typography, in typewriters and in many publishing softwares, some differentiated shapes such as “...” and ‘...’ (called “smart quotes”) are replaced by uniform, straight shapes such as "..." and '...' (called “dumb quotes”).

Sometimes, inner quotation marks may be inserted within outer quotation marks. In this case, the outer pair has the same form as other quotation marks of the text, whereas the inner pair has in general a different form. For instance:

“Mark said ‘hello’ this morning.”
‘Mark said “hello” this morning.’

The following table[1] summerizes various uses in various languages.

Language Standard Alternative Spacing Names, references
primary secondary primary secondary
Afrikaans “…” ‘…’ „…” ‚…’ [2] Aanhalingstekens
Albanian „…“ ‘…’ Thonjëza
Basque «…» ‹…› Komatxoak
Belarusian «…» „…“ Двукоссі ("double commas"), лапкі ("little paws")
Bulgarian [3] „…“ «…» [4] кавички
Catalan [3] «…» “…” [5] “…” ‘…’ 0 pt Cometes franceses (« »), cometes angleses (“ ”), cometes simples (‘ ’). ‹ and › are never used.
Chinese, Simplified “…” ‘…’



[6] Fullwidth form “…” Simplified Chinese 双引号 (Double quotation mark, pinyin: shuāng yǐn hào), ‘…’ Simplified Chinese 单引号 (Single quotation mark, pinyin: dān yǐn hào) GB/T 15834:1995
Chinese, Traditional 「…」 『…』 [7] “…” ‘…’ 引號 (yǐn hào) 國語文教育叢書第三
Croatian „…” ‚…’ »…« Navodnici „…” and »…« (latter not used in handwriting, only press & print); polunavodnici ‚…’
Czech „…“ ‚…‘ »…« ›…‹ Uvozovka (singular), uvozovky (plural) (cf. uvozovat = "to introduce")
Danish »…« ›…‹ „…“
or “…”
‚…‘ citationstegn ("citation marks"), anførselstegn, gåseøjne ("goose eyes")
Dutch “…” ‘…’ „…” ‚…’ Aanhalingstekens ("citation marks")
English, UK ‘…’ or “…” “…” or ‘…’ [8] 1–2 pt Quotation mark, double quote, quote, dirk, double mark, literal mark, double-glitch, inverted commas, speech mark; (INTERCAL: rabbit-ears; ITU-T: dieresis, quotation mark)
English, US “…” ‘…’ [8] 1–2 pt See above
Esperanto “…” ‘…’ [9] Citiloj
Estonian „…“ «…» Jutumärgid ("story marks")
Finnish ”…” ’…’ »…» ’…’ [10] Lainausmerkki ("citation mark", singular), lainausmerkit (plural)
French [3] « … » « … » or “…”[11] [4] “ … ” ‘ … ’ ¼-em / non-break Guillemets
French, Swiss [12] «…» ‹…› See above
Georgian „…“ “…” 0 pt ბრჭყალები (brč’q’alebi "claws")
German „…“ ‚…‘ »…« ›…‹ Anführungszeichen, Gänsefüßchen ("little goose feet"), Hochkommas/Hochkommata ("high commas")
German, Swiss [12] «…» ‹…› See above
Greek[3][5] «…» “…” [13][14] 1 pt εισαγωγικά ("introductory marks")
Hebrew “…” [2] “…„ merkha'ot — מֵרְכָאוֹת (plural of merkha — מֵרְכָא); a similar punctuation mark unique to Hebrew is called gershayimגרשיים
Hungarian [3] „…” »…« macskaköröm ("cat claws"), idézőjel ("quotation mark" = „ ”), lúdláb ("goose feet"), hegyével befelé forduló jelpár (» «)
Icelandic „…“ ‚…‘ Gæsalappir ("goose feet")
Indonesian “…” ‘…’ Tanda kutip, tanda petik
Interlingua Virgulettas
Irish “…” ‘…’ 1–2 pt Liamóg (from "William", see Guillemets)
Italian [3] «…» “…” ‘…’ 1–2 pt Virgolette
Italian, Swiss [12] «…» ‹…› See above
Japanese 「…」 『…』 [7] Template:Nihongo, Template:Nihongo
Korean “…” ‘…’ 『…』 「…」 따옴표(“ttaompyo”)
Latvian «…» „…“ Pēdiņas
Lithuanian „…“ ‚…‘ «…» ‹…› Kabutės
Macedonian[15] „…“ ’…‘ Наводници (primary level, double quote), полунаводници (secondary level, single quote)
Norwegian «…» ’…’ „…” ’…’ [16] Anførselstegn, gåseauge/gåseøyne ("goose eyes"), hermeteikn/hermetegn, sittatteikn/sitattegn, dobbeltfnutt
Polish [17] „…” «…» [4] «…» [18] Cudzysłów
Portuguese, Brazil [3] “…” ‘…’ Aspas Duplas and Aspas Simples respectively.
Portuguese, Portugal [3] «…» “…” “…” ‘…’ Aspas or Vírgulas dobradas[19]
Romanian [3] „…” «…» [20] «…» „…” 0 pt Ghilimele (plural), ghilimea (singular, rarely used)
Russian [3] «…» „…“ 0 pt Кавычки (kavychki, general term); ёлочки (yolochki, "little fir trees": angle quotes); лапки (lapki, "little paws": curly quotes)
Serbian „…“ ’…’ „…” or »…« Наводници, знаци навода (cyr.) / Navodnici, znaci navoda (lat.)
Slovak „…“ ‚…‘ »…« ›…‹ úvodzovka (singular), úvodzovky (plural)
(cf. uvádzať = "to introduce")
Slovene „…“ ‚…‘ »…« ›…‹
Sorbian „…“ ‚…‘
Spanish [3] «…» “…” “…” ‘…’ [5] 0 pt Comillas latinas or comillas angulares (« »), comillas inglesas dobles (“ ”), comillas inglesas simples (‘ ’). ‹ and › are never used in Spanish.
Swedish ”…” ’…’ »…» or »…« ’…’ [21] citationstecken, anföringstecken, citattecken (modernised term), dubbelfnutt (colloquial for ASCII double quote)
Thai “…” ‘…’ อัญประกาศ (anprakat)
Turkish «…» ‹…› “…” ‘…’ 0–1 pt Tırnak İşareti ("fingernail mark")
Ukrainian «…» „…“ 0 pt Лапки [plural only] (lapky, "little paws")
Vietnamese “…” Dấu ngoặc kép
Welsh ‘…’ or “…” “…” or ‘…’ 1–2 pt Dyfynodau

Notes

  1. Extracted from Wikipedia—enhancement is welcome.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Traditional
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 Quotation dash preferred for dialogue
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Rare
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 A closing quotation mark is added to the beginning of each new paragraph.
  6. This is only used when text is written vertically.
  7. 7.0 7.1 These forms are rotated for use in horizontal text; they were originally written ﹁…﹂ and ﹃…﹄ in vertical text
  8. 8.0 8.1 An opening quotation mark is added to the beginning of each new paragraph.
  9. In practice usage may vary, chiefly depending on the native language of the author and publisher.
  10. This usage is regulated by the standard SFS 4175:2006, “Typing of numbers, marks and signs”. Released by the National standards organization of Finland.
  11. First version according to the French Imprimerie nationale. English quotes are more common, though.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 In Switzerland the same style is used for all languages.
  13. Δημήτρης Ν. Μαρωνίτης, «Το Εγκόλπιο της Ορθής Γραφής» (1998)
  14. Source: Διοργανικό εγχειρίδιο σύνταξης κειμένων
  15. pp. 141-143, Правопис на македонскиот литературен јазик, Б. Видеоски etal., Просветно Дело-Скопје (2007)
  16. Handwriting.
  17. Preferred for headings and other texts in larger font sizes
  18. May substitute for either the opening or closing mark
  19. Source: Bergström, Magnus, & Neves Reis 2004. Prontuário Ortográfico e Guia da Língua Portuguesa. Editorial Notícias, Lisboa
  20. Academia Română, Institutul de Lingvistică „Iorgu Iordan”, Îndreptar ortografic, ortoepic şi de punctuaţie, ediţia a V-a, Univers Enciclopedic, Bucureşti, 1995
  21. [1] Språknämnden, questions and answers (in Swedish)