Double hyphen
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The double hyphen (⸗) is a punctuation mark that consists of two parallel hyphens. It is not to be confused with two consecutive hyphens (--), which usually represent an em dash (—) on devices which do not have a dedicated em dash glyph. In order to avoid its being confused with the equals sign (=), which is a mathematical symbol indicating equality, the double hyphen is often rotated slightly counter-clockwise.
[edit] Usage
The double hyphen is used for several different purposes throughout the world:
- Some typefaces, such as Fraktur, use the double hyphen as a graphical variant of the single hyphen.
- It may be also used for artistic or commercial purposes to achieve a distinctive visual effect. For example, the name of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel is officially written with a double hyphen.
- In Merriam-Webster dictionaries if a word is divided at the end of the line, and the division-point happens to be a hyphen, it is replaced with a double hyphen to graphically indicate that the divided word is normally hyphenated, for example cross⸗
country. - It is used as a distinct punctuation mark by Coptic language scholars.
[edit] Unicode
When the double hyphen is used as a functionally equivalent graphical variant of the single hyphen, it is represented in Unicode as a normal hyphen.
When used as a punctuation mark distinct from the single hyphen, the double hyphen is represented in Unicode by two different code points:
Name | Glyph | Code point | Purpose |
---|---|---|---|
DOUBLE OBLIQUE HYPHEN | ⸗ | U+2E17 | Western orthography (including Coptic language scholarship) |
KATAKANA-HIRAGANA DOUBLE HYPHEN | ゠ | U+30A0 | Japanese orthography |