See also: ✝ [U+271D LATIN CROSS], ✞ [U+271E SHADOWED WHITE LATIN CROSS], and ✟ [U+271F OUTLINED LATIN CROSS]
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Translingual
editEtymology
editDerives from the obelus, ⟨⸓⟩. Originally shaped like a dagger, it is now sometimes identical in shape to a Latin cross.
Symbol
edit† (English symbol name dagger or obelus)
- Died, dead.
- Joseph Smith, †1956
- Joseph Smith, died in 1956
- (typography) Used to indicate a (second) footnote.
- (biology, linguistics) Extinct.
- (botany) Used to indicated a destroyed type specimen.
- 1986, Charles Jeffrey, “The Senecioneae in East Tropical Africa: Notes on Compositae: IV”, in Kew Bulletin, volume 41, number 4 (in English), , page 906:
- "Type: Zaire, Ruwenzori, Butago valley, Mildbraed 2575 (holotype B†; isotype BR)."
- (cricket) Used in scorecards to indicate the wicketkeeper.
- (chess notation) Check.
- Synonym: +
- (textual criticism, palaeography) crux critica, crux desperationis, used around a corrupt part of a text
- (music) A pointing mark in Anglican chant, used in the margin to indicate a nonstandard place where a verse should be sung with the second part of a two-part chant; typically used for the final verse of a psalm with an odd number of verses.
- (quantum mechanics, superscript) Hermitian conjugate of
See also
editCategories:
- Character boxes with images
- General Punctuation block
- Unspecified script characters
- Translingual lemmas
- Translingual symbols
- Translingual terms with usage examples
- mul:Typography
- mul:Biology
- mul:Linguistics
- mul:Botany
- Translingual terms with quotations
- mul:Cricket
- mul:Chess
- mul:Palaeography
- mul:Music
- mul:Quantum mechanics
- mul:Death