Dagger (Typography)

A dagger (†, †, U+2020) is a typographical symbol or glyph. It is also called an obelus, from a Greek word meaning "roasting spit" or "needle"; or obelisk, an alteration of the above (see obelisk). A double dagger (‡, ‡ U+2021) is a variant with two "handles", and is also called a diesis. The dagger is used to indicate a footnote, in the same way an asterisk is. However, the dagger is only used as a second footnote when an asterisk is already used. Third footnote employs the double daggers. Additional footnotes are somewhat inconsistent and represented by a variety of symbols, some of which are non-existent in early modern typography. Partly due to this, in modern literature, superscript numerals are used in the place of pictorial symbols. Some texts use asterisks and daggers alongside superscripts, using the former for per-page footnotes and the latter for endnotes. Sometimes it is substituted in ASCII by a plus sign (+). Since it also represents the Christian cross, in certain predominantly Christian regions, the mark is used in a text after the name of a deceased person or the date of death, as in Christian graves. (For examples, see biographies on German Wikipedia.) In European railway timetables, the dagger (Christian cross) is frequently used as a conventional sign meaning "Sundays and holidays". The names of the comic-book heroes Astrix and Oblix come from a pun on the French names of the asterisk and the obelisk.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
unterseeboot 413
type xiv u boat
hemant kumar
packet sniffer
new world
strait of tartary
abacus logic
sea of japan
comma (punctuation)
apostrophe (mark)
gennadi nevelskoi
list of male boxers
colon (punctuation)
hauts de seine
paris commune
solemnity
dash
slush fund
asterisk
ampersand
main street
bullet (typography)
dry ice
sociology of knowledge
commercial at
confirmation bias
cassowary
judas
judas iscariot
ego, superego and id
widukind
caroline county, maryland
transactional analysis
widukind of corvey
carroll county, maryland
roger boyle
margo coleman
richard boyle, 3rd earl of burlington
royal welch fusiliers
blohm & voss
object relational mapping
nsg
pope hyginus
pope pius x