Ceremonial magicians can get a little weird sometimes. Anyone else, when forming an abbreviation for the name of their mystical group, would simply use periods, or just form a normal acronym. This is what groups like the WLPA (Witches’ League for Public Awareness), CoG (Covenant Of the Goddess) and A.D.F. (Ár nDraíocht Féin) do.
But the ceremonial types have just gotta be different. So sometimes, instead of abbreviating “Golden Dawn” to G.D., or “Ordo Templi Orientis” to O.T.O., they’ll instead use this three-dot symbol, thus making things like the A∴A∴
In ASCII situations, this symbol is usually represented by an apostrophe between two periods: .'. In full 8-bit text, it can be shown with two periods bracketing a middle-height dot (ASCII 183): .·.; in Unicode situations, the mathematical symbol for “therefore” (hexadecimal 2234, or ∴ in HTML, yielding: ∴) is perfect.
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