Posted on 09/04/2011 6:26:53 PM PDT by Daffynition
Johnson & Johnson, Barnes & Noble, Dolce & Gabbana: the ampersand today is used primarily in business names, but that small character was once the 27th part of the alphabet. Where did it come from though? The origin of its name is almost as bizarre as the name itself.
The shape of the character (&) predates the word ampersand by more than 1,500 years. In the first century, Roman scribes wrote in cursive, so when they wrote the Latin word et which means and they linked the e and t. Over time the combined letters came to signify the word and in English as well. Certain versions of the ampersand, like that in the font Caslon, clearly reveal the origin of the shape.
The word ampersand came many years later when & was actually part of the English alphabet. In the early 1800s, school children reciting their ABCs concluded the alphabet with the &. It would have been confusing to say X, Y, Z, and. Rather, the students said, and per se and. Per se means by itself, so the students were essentially saying, X, Y, Z, and by itself and. Over time, and per se and was slurred together into the word we use today: ampersand. When a word comes about from a mistaken pronunciation, its called a mondegreen. Find out why here.
(The ampersand is also used in an unusual configuration where it appears as &c and means etc. The ampersand does double work as the e and t.)
Actually, there used to be 28 letters in the alphabet, but L&M got kicked out for smoking...
Very interesting!
Well, it may be because I’m in my 50s, but when I was a wee boy the ampersand was indeed included at the end of the alphabet that was painted across the top of the chalkboards in elementary school classrooms; also I think my magnetic letter board had that as well.
That’s so interesting! Thanks very much!
Liberals could never have a thread liek this...they’d just write....”fu**in &” and be done with it....
Early Roman script, around the middle of the 4th century, coinciding with the Romans inventing spaghetti
Hmmmn.
I always used the “capital E” with a vertical bar through it when printing an ampersand.
Wow - flashback - my first grade school was L&M in the small town of Lyons, Indiana.
What is that little thing that is an ‘a’ encircled - @ what is this thing called?
It’s called the percent sign.
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