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Braces or Curly Brackets Curly brackets – also properly called braces in the US – are used in specialized ways in poetry and music (to mark repeats or joined lines). | |
Comma The comma (,) is a punctuation mark, and it appears in several variants in various languages | |
Columbia University Symbol The design of the Columbia identity incorporates the core elements of well-thought-out branding: name, font, color, and visual mark. | |
Policeman lives here A symbol indicating danger. Hobos in the United States, as well as Sweden and Great Britain, place this mark outside the home of a police officer (or as an indicator that the residents have a tendenc… | |
Semicolon (Alternative) semicolon. A punctuation mark (;) used to join two independent clauses in a sentence. The semicolon shows that the ideas in the two clauses are related. | |
Tripundra Tripundra, believed to be a spiritual symbol in the tradition of Lord Shiva, consists of three horizontal lines and a red mark (usually dot) on the center line. The lines are made with the sacred ash… | |
Dash The dash is a punctuation mark that is similar in appearance to the hyphen and minus sign but differs from these symbols in length and, in some fonts, height above the baseline. | |
Acclamation Point An unconventional punctuation mark indicating an enthusiastic demonstration of honor, goodwill, or welcome. | |
Andorpersand An unconventional punctuation mark meant to replace the phrase 'and/or'. | |
Certitude Point An unconventional punctuation mark used to let the reader know that the writer is absolutely certain something is true. | |
Doubt Point An unconventional punctuation mark used when the writer wants to end a sentence with a skeptical tone. | |
Exclamation Comma An unconventional punctuation mark that allows the writer to use an exclamation point in the middle of a sentence. | |
Period (Friendly) An unconventional punctuation mark which combats misperception of a period by lightening the tone of what would otherwise be read as a bitter or sarcastic sentence. | |
Hemidemisemicolon An unconventional punctuation mark capable of taking the place of periods, commas, and semicolons. | |
Love Point An unconventional punctuation mark intended to denote a statement of affection. | |
Sarcastisies An unconventional punctuation mark that conveys a sarcastic sentence. | |
SarcMark An unconventional punctuation mark meant to telegraph sarcasm. | |
Mockwotation Marks An unconventional punctuation mark meant to indicate that the person who is being quoted is being mocked. | |
Sinceroid An unconventional punctuation mark meant to indicate that the writer is being sincere, as opposed to conveying any other emotion. | |
Superellipses An unconventional punctuation mark that conveys a dramatic pause. | |
Treble Clef When the G-clef is placed on the second line of the stave, it is called the treble clef. This is the most common clef used today, and the only G-clef still in use. For this reason, the terms G-clef a… | |
Colon The colon is a punctuation mark consisting of two equally sized dots centered on the same vertical line. In Unicode, it is encoded at U+003A : colon (HTML: :). | |
Full Stop or Period A full stop (British English, Hiberno-English, Australian English, and New Zealand English) or period (American English and Canadian English) is the punctuation mark placed to indicate the end of sen… | |
Guillemet Guillemets (pron.: /ˈɡɪləmɛt/, or /ɡiːəˈmeɪ/, French: [ɡijmɛ]), also called angle quotes or French quotation marks, are polylines, pointed as if arrows (« or »), sometimes forming a complementary set… | |
Hyphen The hyphen (‐) is a punctuation mark used to join words and to separate syllables of a single word. The use of hyphens is called hyphenation. |