- Guillemets
Guillemets (pron-en|ˈɡɪləmɛt, or IPAlink-en|ɡiːəˈmeɪ after French IPAlink|ɡijmɛ), also called
angle quotes , are line segments, pointed as if arrows (« or »), sometimes forming a complementary set of punctuation marks used as a form ofquotation mark .The symbol at either end — double « and » or single ‹ and › — is a guillemet. They are used in a number of languages to indicate speech. They are also referred to as symbols forfast forward andrewind .Uses
Used pointing outwards («like this») to indicate speech in these languages:
* Albanian
* Arabic
* Armenian
* Belarusian
* Bulgarian
* Catalan
* Estonian
* Franco-Provençal
* French (separated by spaces « like this »)
* Galician
* German (only in Switzerland)
* Greek
* Italian
* North Korean (in South Korea " is used)
* Latvian
* Lithuanian
* Norwegian
* Persian
* Polish usually to indicate a quote inside a quote (nowadays, though incorrectly, more often used pointing inwards)
* Portuguese (European)
* Romanian, only to indicate a quotation within a quotation
* Russian, and some languages of the formerSoviet Union using Cyrillic script
* Spanish (although their use is uncommon outside Spain)
*Swiss languages
* Turkish
* Ukrainian
* VietnameseUsed pointing inwards (»like this«) to indicate speech in these languages:
* Croatian
* Czech
* Danish
* German (Except in Switzerland. „...“ is also used)
* Hungarian
* Serbian
* Slovak
* SloveneUsed pointing right (»like this») to indicate speech in these languages:
* Finnish
* SwedishDirection
A guillemet is sometimes used to indicate direction, for example:
* fast forward button on a media player, or fast rewind indicated by the complementary guillemet
* a chevron on road signage to show road direction, or multiple chevrons pointing in the same direction for emphasis
* as an alternative to an ellipsis in a document, for example to indicate additional content. The guillemet is balanced in the spine height of the line for most fonts, so it is more visible than an ellipsis.Other uses
*Guillemets are used in Chinese to indicate the title of a book. For instance, 《汤姆·索亚历险记》 is Chinese for "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer".
*In the RPL programming language, guillemets are used to demarcate the beginning and end of a program.Etymology
The word is a diminutive of the French name "Guillaume" (whose equivalent in English is "William"), after the French printer and punchcutter
Guillaume le Bé (1525–1598). [ [http://www.microsoft.com/typography/developers/fdsspec/punc.htm Character design standards - Punctuation 1 ] ] [ [http://www.decodeunicode.org/en/u+00ab decodeunicode.org . decode . LEFT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK ] ] Some languages derive their word for guillemets analogously; for example, the Irish term is "Liamóg", from "Liam" 'William' and a diminutive suffix.Guillemets in computing
Typing "«" and "»" on computers
For Windows users, type "«" by holding Alt + 0171 and "»" by holding Alt + 0187. The characters are standard on French Canadian keyboards and some others.
For Macintosh users, type "«" as Option-Backslash and "»" as Option-Shift-Backslash. (This applies to all English-language keyboard layouts supplied with the operating system, e.g. "Australian", "British", "Canadian", "U.S." and "U.S. Extended". Other language layouts may differ.)
For GNU/Linux users, it would depend on a number of factors including the
keyboard layout that is in effect, whether you were using X Window. For example with US InternationalKeyboard layout selected you would type Alt Gr + [ for "«" and Alt Gr + "] " for "»". On some configurations you type "«" as Alt Gr + z and "»" as Alt Gr + x. With the compose key, press Compose + < + < and Compose + > + >.Guillemets are often produced with double
inequality characters (<< or >>) or double chevrons (〈〈 or 〉〉) particularly on computers withoperating systems or keyboards that do not have support for the actual characters.Terminology
In
Unicode , the « character is called "left-pointing double angle quotation mark", and exists at code point U+00AB (HTML entity &laquo;), whilst the » character is named "right-pointing double angle quotation mark", and is located at code point U+00BB (HTML entity &raquo;). Despite their names, the characters are mirrored when used in right-to-left contexts.UML
Guillemets are used in
Unified Modeling Language to indicate a stereotype of a standard element.Mail Merge
Microsoft Word uses guillemets when creating mail merges. Microsoft use these punctuation marks to denote a mail merge "field", such as "«Title»", "«AddressBlock»" or "«GreetingLine»". Then on the final print-out, the guillemet-marked tags are replaced by the corresponding data outlined for that field by the user.
Guillemet vs. guillemot
In
Adobe Systems font software, their file format specifications, and in all fonts derived from these that contain the characters, the word is incorrectly spelled "guillemot" (amalapropism :guillemot s are actually a type of bird) in the names of the two glyphs "guillemotleft" and "guillemotright". Adobe acknowledges the error but says that the incorrect names are the ones actually used in existing fonts and software; [Adobe Systems Inc., "PostScript Language Reference" 3rd edition, Addison Wesley 1999. ISBN 0-201-37922-8. Character set endnote 3, page 783. ] presumably, it is too late to change it, as it would break existing software.Likewise, X11 (
X Window System ) mistakenly calls them XK_guillemotleft and XK_guillemotright in the file "keysymdef.h".See also
*
Bracket
* Chevron
*Keyboard (computing)
*Quotation mark References
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