I've been vaguely aware of the word ligature as meaning "a character consisting of two or more letters combined into one," such as æ or œ. But this meaning, in the local papers, was new to me.
Ligature marks around her neck showed she had been strangled with a cord or piece of wire, Hawkins said, and an autopsy placed her death at about noon the day before.
Interesting, Shu, because I hadn't known your definition. I had only known it from surgery to mean a strand of suture material used to "tie off" or seal blood vessels to prevent bleeding.
I just found this definition from music, too:
a '''ligature''' is a symbol that marks a set of musical notes which are to be played in such a way as to form a single musical phrase. As such, it is also known as a '''phrase mark''', and takes the form of a curved line extended over the notes.
quote:But this meaning, in the local papers, was new to me. _Ligature_ marks around her neck showed she had been strangled with a cord or piece of wire, Hawkins said, and an autopsy placed her death at about noon the day before.
Golly, Shu, I would have thought you'd have known that from the favorite song of the happy stranglers of S&M fame, Gaudeamus Ligature.
The only meaning I knew for ligature before this discussion was the thingy that holds the reed to the mouth piece on a clarinet or saxophone. It's a brace-like thing . . . oh, here is a link.
So, with that reference from my own past, the news article would have made sense to me in a strangling incident.
******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama
CW, if you look at older printed books and pay attention to certain groups of letters like fi or fl, you'll see that they are not just and f and an i next to one another, but a fused single graph (in fact in the fi ligature there is not dot over the i). There's no way for me to represent the fi ligature in HTML, but the æ and the œ can be. Look at them. They're like a single letter rather than two letters next to one another. (See Wikipedia for a better explanation with pictures.)
Originally posted by jheem: When I think of ligatures, I think of certain groups of letters which have been connected in some way: e.g., ct, fi, fl, ß, æ, œ, etc.
My son, who is learning French, wants to know why they do this. Was it just for aesthetic reasons (as I suspect the fi ligature is), or were they to represent single vowel instead of two, or what?
Interesting...the music buffs know it as a music term; the linguists see its association with letters; the medical people see it as suture material, the generally informed people see it as the "act of binding things together,"...and the murderers see it as stangling material!"