Tick (checkmark)

A tick (known as a checkmark or check in American English) is a mark () (Check mark) used to indicate the concept "yes", for example "yes, this has been verified" or "yes, I agree". Its opposite is the cross () (X mark), although the cross can also be positive, for example in elections.

As a verb, to tick (off) or to check (off) means to add such a mark. It is quite common, especially on printed forms, printed documents, and computers (see check box), for there to be squares in which to place ticks. In America and Germany, it is more common for people to check a square box with a cross (); while in some European countries, it is more common for people to check a square box with a v-shaped checkmark.citation needed]

A rainbow-colored tick was also used for the Amiga logo during the Commodore era of the Amiga (1985-1994).

Contributors to The Guardian's Notes and Queries page on the tick mark suggest that it goes back to the ancient Romans: When keeping checklists, they marked the items that they had checked with a V, standing for the Latin word veritas ("truth"). However the contributors don't provide much evidence for this.

Another history suggests that it comes from the use of fountain pens. A fountain pen (a "self-filling pen" not a dip pen or a quill pen) would not always start flowing ink without some initial action. The downstroke of the pen's nib was enough to get the ink flowing and then the ink was available for the upstroke.citation needed]