The C standard (N1570) defines digraphs:
6.4.6 Punctuators
....
3 In all aspects of the language, the six tokens
<:
:>
<%
%>
%:
%:%:
behave, respectively, the same as the six tokens 79)
[
]
{
}
#
##
except for their spelling.80)
79) These tokens are sometimes called ‘‘digraphs’’.
80) Thus [
and <:
behave differently when ‘‘stringized’’ (see 6.10.3.2), but can otherwise be freely interchanged.
As a side note, C++ standard elaborates on the term:
The term “digraph” (token consisting of two characters) is not
perfectly descriptive, since one of the alternative preprocessing-tokens is %:%:
and of course several primary tokens contain two
characters. Nonetheless, those alternative tokens that aren’t lexical keywords are colloquially known as “digraphs”.
According to Digraphs and trigraphs:
In 1994 a normative amendment to the C standard, included in C99, supplied digraphs as more readable alternatives to five of the trigraphs. ....
Unlike trigraphs, digraphs are handled during tokenization, and any digraph must always represent a full token by itself, or compose the token %:%:
replacing the preprocessor concatenation token ##
. If a digraph sequence occurs inside another token, for example a quoted string, or a character constant, it will not be replaced.