Talk:Pilcrow

"Contemporary use - English teachers" and some loose mixed discussions
Maybe something for the 'Contemporary use' section? I've often seen English teachers use a pilcrow while grading papers, to tell the student they should have started a new paragraph. I couldn't find anything on google to support this though.

Comments
At various points (well, 2, at the time of writing :-/) this article refers to the form of &amp;para; as though it were outside the discussion of variations due to typeface. Surely this is somewhat dubious, since that HTML entity will have to be drawn using whatever typeface the browser is configured to use, and so could theoretically look like anything! I can think of two three ways round this: I'm actually warming to the idea of 1, if anyone can find a nice selection of fonts to take a screenshot of some nice anti-aliased pilcrows in... IMSoP 22:31, 23 Apr 2004 (UTC)
 * 1) Upload a picture showing a particularly typical pilcrow - or perhaps a nice selection of them, nicely presented.
 * 2) Remove the references to "normally looking like this", and stick with the descriptions.
 * 3) My least favourite option, but a possibility, would be to use HTML markup to (attempt to) force display of parts of the text in a particular font, and say something ugly like "if you are viewing this on a computer with Arial installed, you should see a fairly typical pilcrow here" - OK, it needn't sound that bad, I just don't like the idea enough on technical grounds to spend any effort here.
 * I have added a picture of a nice pilcrow in Gentium. There may be copyright issues with other fonts...&mdash;[[User:MikeX|MikeX (Talk)]] 10:26, Nov 13, 2004 (UTC)

''The following was inline in the article, but I couldn't work out how to refactor all of it in a very encyclopedic way. I've tried, but I'm not sure whether I've made much improvement, so I'll dump the original form here, in case someone else - or my future self - wants to have a go:'' - IMSoP 23:02, 23 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Additional Etymology: (q.v. http://www.typophile.com/forums/messages/29/1486.html )


 * "According to Parkes's Pause and Effect: An Introduction to the History of Punctuation in the West ... the pilcrow is a symbol for 'paraph' (which can also be marked by a double-slash, or a full-height cent-like sign), and it started as a 'C', for capitulum.
 * "BTW, Parkes also says that the pilcrow replaced the 'paragraphus' (which was marked in various ways, including a section symbol)."