Thursday, 6 November 2025

Can you read a sentence without any punctuation?

GRAMMAR

Who invented punctuation?

While it’s sometimes tricky to know how to properly use a semicolon, and English majors love to debate Oxford commas, we’d be lost without punctuation marks. But written language existed long before em dashes and exclamation points. Who invented punctuation marks?

Author

Stewart Edelstein

A period, question and exclamation mark post it notes

CANYOUREADTHISIBETITSHARDWITHOUTPUNCTUATIONITSHARDTOREADEVENSHORTSENTENCES 

Can you read this? I bet it’s hard. Without punctuation it’s hard to read even short sentences. Initially, ancient Greek was written in all caps with no punctuation or spacing. We even find inscriptions from ancient Rome written in all caps with only small dots breaking up the words. Speech, especially the eloquent and persuasive speech of politicians and elected officials, was valued more highly than the written word. But now punctuation makes all the difference. For example, the versatile “OK” can be a question (“OK?”), an agreement (“OK.”), or an exasperated exclamation (“OK!”). So, where did these punctuation marks come from?

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EMOJI DECODED

Grinning Face with One Large and One Small Eye emoji

Grinning Face with One Large and One Small Eye

Meaning: Shows a face with different-sized eyes and a big grin, suggesting silliness or wild energy.


Evolution: This emoji with a goofy, zany expression quickly became popular after its 2018 introduction for representing silly feelings or intentionally strange behavior, particularly among younger users.


Usage: [Caption on a photo representing a late-night study session:] Me after my 5th coffee today πŸ€ͺ

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Rachel Gresh, Word Smarts Writer

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