enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of typographical symbols and punctuation marks

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_typographical...

    Chemical symbol – Abbreviations used in chemistry; Chinese punctuationPunctuation used with Chinese characters; Currency symbol – Symbol used to represent a monetary currency's name; Diacritic – Modifier mark added to a letter (accent marks etc.) Hebrew punctuationPunctuation conventions of the Hebrew language over time

  3. Punctuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punctuation

    Arabic, Urdu, and Persian—written from right to left—use a reversed question mark: ؟ , and a reversed comma: ، . This is a modern innovation; pre-modern Arabic did not use punctuation. Hebrew, which is also written from right to left, uses the same characters as in English, , and ? . [24]

  4. Quotation mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_mark

    Quotation marks [A] are punctuation marks used in pairs in various writing systems to identify direct speech, a quotation, or a phrase. The pair consists of an opening quotation mark and a closing quotation mark, which may or may not be the same glyph . [ 3 ]

  5. Comma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma

    Commas are often used to enclose parenthetical words and phrases within a sentence (i.e., information that is not essential to the meaning of the sentence). Such phrases are both preceded and followed by a comma, unless that would result in a doubling of punctuation marks or the parenthetical is at the start or end of the sentence.

  6. Full stop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_stop

    [6] [1] The word period was used as a name for what printers often called the "full point", the punctuation mark that was a dot on the baseline and used in several situations. The phrase full stop was only used to refer to the punctuation mark when it was used to terminate a sentence. [1] This terminological distinction seems to be eroding.

  7. Exclamation mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exclamation_mark

    The exclamation mark is sometimes used in conjunction with the question mark. This can be in protest or astonishment ("Out of all places, the squatter-camp?!"); a few writers replace this with a single, nonstandard punctuation mark, the interrobang, which is the combination of a question mark and an exclamation mark. [27]

  8. Nuqta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuqta

    The nuqta (Hindi: नुक़्ता, Urdu: نقطہ, romanized: nuqtā; sometimes also spelled nukta), is a diacritic mark that was introduced in Devanagari and some other Indic scripts to represent sounds not present in the original scripts. [A] [1] It takes the form of a dot placed below a character.

  9. Word divider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_divider

    In punctuation, a word divider is a form of glyph which separates written words.In languages which use the Latin, Cyrillic, and Arabic alphabets, as well as other scripts of Europe and West Asia, the word divider is a blank space, or whitespace.