Comma (rhetoric)

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In Ancient Greek rhetoric, a comma (κόμμα komma, plural κόμματα kommata) is a short clause, something less than a colon. The plural of comma in English is commata.

In the system of Aristophanes of Byzantium, commata were separated by middle interpuncts.

In antiquity, a comma was defined as a combination of words that has no more than eight syllables.[dubious discuss]

There is a short text which arguably could have been inserted in the first epistle of John called the Johannine Comma.

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