Using the Character Map program on your computer is the easiest way, but perhaps Cathy is doing it my (other) way from the old computer school.
I love doing € (Euro), ™, ¢, ©, ®, ° (deg), ¶, ¼, ½, ¾, ², ³, é and many others.![]()
EVOO and OO have been in use much longer than Rachael Ray has been???
Make sure the 'NUM' lock is on before you hold down the ALT key. These are part of the original ASCII keystrokes. Type the numbers from 0128 thru 0255 to find what's there and keep track of them. You have to use the ALT key because there are not enough keys on the QWERTY keyboard to display them as a key.
The "Character Map" is a Windows program and can probably be found in the 'Accessories' section of your Start Menu. I don't know for sure since I always move it right to the front of my start menu since I use it all the time for the symbols I don't have in my head. And you will find that not all fonts are the same. Different font sets have different symbols sets too. Search and you might even find some secret ones that font creators leave behind.