punctuation space

English

edit

Etymology

edit

Used to give consistent presentation of quotation marks irrespective of comma or period placement.

Noun

edit

punctuation space (plural punctuation spaces)

  1. (in dated typography) A space of non-variable width: ⊣ ⊢ equal to the width of a period (full stop) or comma, inserted after ⟨“⟩ or ⟨‘⟩ and before ⟨”⟩ or ⟨’⟩ (and sometimes ⟨?⟩ or ⟨!⟩), unless a punctuation mark occurs there. It is Unicode character U+2008.[1] When using X11 input method, the conventional key combination is Compose+Space+Period.
    Many examples occur on page 204 of the 1837 New Sporting Magazine XIII.

References

edit