| Symbol | Name | Purpose |
| - | Obelus | Oldest and most basic (and occasionally shown in other forms); indicates a spurious line. (Used by Origen in the Hexapla to indicate a section found in the Hebrew but not the Greek. For this purpose, of course, it had sometimes to be inserted into the text, rather than the margin, since the LXX, unlike Homer, was prose rather than poetry.) |
| Diple | Indicates a noteworthy point (whether an unusual word or an important point of content). Often used in conjunction with scholia. | |
| periestigmene (dotted diple) | Largely specific to Homer; indicates a difference between editions | |
| Asteriskos | A line repeated (incorrectly) in another context (the location of the repetition was marked with the asterisk plus obelus). (Used by Origen to note a place where the Greek and Hebrew were not properly parallel.) | |
| Asterisk plus obelus | Indicates the repetition of a passage which correctly belongs elsewhere (the other use, where the passage is "correct," is also marked, but only with the asterisk) | |
| Antistigma | Indicates lines which have been disordered |
Many mistakes in copying arise when a scribe misreads the exemplar. Handwriting
being what it is, chances are that, on occasion, almost everything has been read as
something else. But some errors are much more likely than others. In Greek uncials,
for example, the shown at right were frequently and easily confused:
From Greek roots meaning "again-scraped." A palimpsest
was a manuscript which was re-used. Presumably the original writing
was no longer valued and/or easily read, and a scribe decided that the
expensive parchment could be better used for something else (almost all
palimpsest are parchment; papyrus and paper are not suitable for re-use).
In most instances the parchment would be washed and/or scraped and
resurfaced, then overwritten, although there are instances of manuscripts
which were overwritten without being cleaned. (As inks evolved, they became
harder to erase, so some documents reportedly were actually written between
the lines of the old manuscripts -- quite possible, given the size difference
between literary uncials and late minuscules.) The most thorough method
of cleansing is said to be scraping (with a knife or pumice), followed by
soaking with cheese, milk, and lime.