Quasi-Quotemarks
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Quasi-quotemarks or quasiquotes, quotation marks with hyphens underneath ("like this," with the hyphen directly below the quotation mark) indicate a paraphrase rather than a direct quote. The concept was introduced by Jack Speer in the 1940s, and stayed in use until typewriters gave way to word processors, which made it difficult to achieve, as with the use of virgules for semi-cancellations.
On a typer, it was done by backspacing to add the hyphen; in the modern computer age, quasiquotes can be created without much trouble using strikethrough coding, but few fanwriters still employ them.
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
(Speer) It frequently is impossible or inconvenient to quote a speaker's exact words, and not vital to do so. In such a case, you may merely give the substance of what he said; and in place of quotation marks, use quote-marks with a hyphen under each, "-like this-", instead of qualifying the quotation with a clumsy phrase like "or words to that effect". Such quasi-quotes indicate that you will be answerable for the substantial meaning and implications of the quotation but do not have the exact wording available or have altered the original construction and wording to fit conveniently into your sentence structure. Example: "But, |
From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944 |
(Speer) - It frequently is impossible or inconvenient to quote and exact works of a speaker or writer, and not important to do so. In such case, you may merely give the substance of what he said, and in place of quotation makes, use quote-marks with a hyphen under each "-like this-" instead of qualifying the quotation with a clumsy phrase like "or words to that effect". Such quasi-quotemarks indicate that you will be answerable for the substantial meaning and implications of the quotation, but either do not have the exact wording available, or have rearranged the construction and wording of the original statement to fit conveniently into your sentence structure. Examples: "but, |
Publishing |