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What symbols are customarily used for “○○” in English?

English Language & Usage Asked on September 27, 2021

If you have studied languages such as Japanese, you have probably encountered the symbol “○○”.

I am told that there are two purposes for “○○”.

  1. To act as a placeholder for whatever word you like.
  2. To partially or completely censor a word that may cause offence or copyright infringement.

Personally, for (1), I use “X” in English, because that is what people use in algebra. For (2), I use “****” in English, because that seems to be one of the ways to censor a word.

What symbols are customarily used for “○○” in English?

Edit:

Alright, let’s try some examples.

  1. 「○○にお茶がありますか」(English: “Is there tea on the X?”)
  2. 「○○な場所がありますか」(English: “Is there a place where it is X?”)
  3. 「ウ○クの方の、中○、韓○嫌いは異常」(English: “The rers’ hatred toward Chi** and Ko*** is unusual.”)

I hope that helps!

One Answer

What symbols are customarily used for “○○” in English?

As you point out, the asterisk is used in English as censorship: "He's a f* * * ing idiot! I hate the t * * t." (It is usual, but not necessary, to have as many asterisks as there are hidden letters.) (NB, there is no space between the asterisks - it is simply that the formatting uses asterisks for other purposes.)

The blank / underscore is used to hide an identity "Mr ______ from _____ made some comments about the French." (This is now old-fashioned.)

The blank / underscore is also used in questions as a place holder for an answer "I never _____(to see) the incident."

Square brackets with ellipsis are used to indicate missing and unimportant words "The law states that "Any person [...] who [...] drives sheep, [...] across the bridge must pay a toll of £1.00" This might represent "Any person being an adult who herds, moves, conducts or drives sheep, cows, geese, goats, horses across the bridge must pay a toll of £1.00"

I am not sure what you mean by "whatever word you like" is a valid description, e.g. "[.......] is rather large" will only work with a restricted number of words, rather than "any I might like".

Correct answer by Greybeard on September 27, 2021

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