Do you know what I think about a lot? Punctuation. (Yes, Benjy, "alot of punctuation.") And I wanted to share with you some of my heroes from the punctuation world: if you have even a fraction of a Grammar Nazi in you, if you thrill to the sight of a perfectly-placed semicolon or gnash your teeth at those who unwittingly "lapse into a comma," you will surely love them, too. Their names, dear friends, are Aldus Manutius the Elder (1449-1519) and Aldus Manutius the Younger (grandson of the first.) They, frankly, were amazing. By the end of their combined work at their printing press, they had changed the written world forever--and still almost nobody knows their names! Aldus Manutius and Aldus Manutius invented the italic typeface. They were the first to print a modern-usage semicolon in their text. And they were the first to take the medieval virgule (which looked like today's forward slash), pull it down, and curve it: thereby creating the comma. It's all true. Thank them, O English lovers! For without these two inspired printers, English today would be very, very different.

Where's the "like" button?
ReplyDeleteDarling, this makes me deliriously happy.
ReplyDeleteMostly for the sake that only YOU would ever know this :)
Dear Aubrey:
ReplyDeleteThere are so many things that people say "only Kat would know," and it's simply not true. I had to have learned them from somewhere--and someone--right? Why do I know so many random facts? Because I read...a lot. That's all. That's the big secret! For instance, I learned all about the Alduses from that wonderful book, Eats, Shoots and Leaves.
Love, Kat