Interrobang

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Image:Interrobang-big.png

Punctuation marks

apostrophe ( ' ) ( )
brackets ( ( ) ) ( [ ] ) ( { } ) ( 〈 〉 )
colon ( : )
comma ( , )
dashes ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
ellipsis ( ) ( ... )
exclamation mark ( ! )
full stop/period ( . )
hyphen ( - ) ( )
interpunct ( · )
question mark ( ? )
quotation marks ( " ) ( ‘ ’ ) ( “ ” )
semicolon ( ; )
slash/solidus ( / )

Interword separation

spaces: (   ) ( ) ( )

Other typographer's marks

ampersand ( & )
asterisk ( * )
asterism ( )
at ( @ )
backslash ( \ )
bullet ( )
caret ( ^ )
currency (¤)
dagger ( ) ( )
degree ( ° )
interrobang ( )
number sign ( # )
pilcrow ( )
prime ( )
section sign ( § )
tilde ( ~ )
underscore/understrike ( _ )
vertical line/pipe/broken bar ( | ) ( ¦ )

The interrobang () is a rarely-used, nonstandard English-language punctuation mark intended to combine the functions of a question mark and an exclamation point. The typographical character resembles those marks superimposed one over the other. In informal writing, the same effect is achieved by placing the exclamation point after the question mark, e.g. "What?!".

Contents

Application

Depending on one's perspective, a sentence ending with an interrobang either asks a question in an excited manner or expresses excitement or disbelief in the form of a question.

For example:

  • How much did you spend on those shoes
  • You're going out with Marika
  • You traveled to Paris in a submarine
  • You slipped on a banana peel

History

Multiple punctuation marks

Many writers, especially in informal writing, have used multiple punctuation marks to end a sentence expressing surprise and question.

What the....?! Neves, Called Dead in Fall, Denies It (headline from San Francisco Examiner, May 9, 1936)

The question mark frequently comes first (to emphasize that it is a question), although there is no universal style rule on the subject.

It is not uncommon for writers in very informal situations to use several question marks and exclamation marks for even more emphasis:

He did what?!?!?!

Like multiple exclamation marks and multiple question marks, such strings are generally considered very poor style in formal writing.

Writers combined question marks and exclamation points, and used multiple punctuation marks, for decades before the interrobang was invented. They were prevalent in informal media such as print advertisements and comic books. They are currently used in algebraic chess notation with "!?" showing an interesting move that may not be the best, and "?!" showing a dubious move that may nevertheless be difficult to refute.

The invention of the interrobang

American Martin K. Speckter concocted the interrobang itself in 1962. As the head of an advertising agency, Speckter believed that advertisements would look better if advertising copywriters conveyed surprised queries using a single mark. He proposed the concept of a single punctuation mark in an article in the magazine TYPEtalks. Speckter solicited possible names for the new character from readers. Contenders included rhet, exclarotive, and exclamaquest, but he settled on interrobang. He chose the name to reference the punctuation marks that inspired it. interrogatio is Latin for "a rhetorical question" or "cross-examination"; bang is printers' slang for "exclamation point". [1] The French equivalent is "point exclarrogatif", expressing a similar idea - the fusion between "point d'interrogation" (?) and "point d'exclamation" (!).

Graphic treatments for the new mark were also submitted in response to the article.

In 1966, Richard Isbell of American Type Founders issued the Americana typeface and included the interrobang as one of the characters. In 1968, an interrobang key was available on some Remington typewriters. During the 1970s, it was possible to buy replacement interrobang keycaps and strikers for some Smith-Corona typewriters. The interrobang was in vogue for much of the 1960s, with the word 'interrobang' appearing in some dictionaries and the mark itself being featured in magazine and newspaper articles.

The interrobang failed to amount to much more than a fad, however. It has not become a standard punctuation mark. Although most fonts do not include the interrobang, it has not disappeared: Microsoft provides several versions of the interrobang character as part of the Wingdings 2 character set available with Microsoft Office. It was accepted into Unicode and is present in the fonts Lucida Sans Unicode and Arial Unicode MS, among others.

Display

The interrobang is not a standard punctuation mark. Few modern typefaces or fonts include an interrobang among the available characters. It is at Unicode code point Template:Uplusfirst203D. It can be used in HTML documents with ‽ or ‽, although the second form has poor support in common web browsers.

Depending on the browser and which fonts the user has installed, some of these may be displayed. Some of those fonts really do not have interrobang, yet:

Image Default font Fixed
Image:Interrobang.png
Bitstream Vera Sans Bitstream Vera Serif Arev Sans Arev Serif DejaVu Sans DejaVu Serif
Palatino Palatino Linotype Lucida Sans
Unicode
Arial
Unicode MS
Gentium Code2000 Junicode Unicode

Trivia

The interrobang is featured in Michael Gerber's Barry Trotter books (parodies of Harry Potter) as Barry's scar; it therefore features in some of the cover images. It also appears regularly on the hoodie worn by the character Sam in the online cartoon The Moseying.

A reverse and upside down interrobang (combining ¿ and ¡), suitable for starting phrases in Spanish, Asturian and Galician is called by some a gnaborretni (interrobang backwards). It has been proposed for inclusion in the Unicode standard. The Unicode Technical Committee has accepted it to be encoded in the standard with the tentative code point of U+2E18 but it is not yet a part of the standard [2].

An Italian television series called Interrabang prominently featured the symbol. The series was based in and around Pisa, and featured two children trying to collect a number of souvenir statues of the Leaning Tower. Each statue had a different coloured version of an interrobang.

In the comic book Pirate Corps, one character's family owns a robot servant named Interbang, which has a large interrobang symbol emblazoned on its chest. At one point the character orders the robot to beat up all the skinheads in a nightclub; from outside the club the reader then sees a spray of visual "sound effects", including interrobangs, indicating the brawl inside.

In Steven Gould's novel Reflex, Interrobang is the name of a New York coffee shop where the protagonist is kidnapped.

In Lynne Truss's book Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, the interrobang is featured as a future hit with the current "send" society.

The interrobang is featured in the logo for 'The Partnership for a Drug-Free America'.

See also

External links

fr:Point exclarrogatif ja:感嘆修辞疑問符 zh:疑問驚嘆號