mark+of+punctuation

  • 41punctuation mark — noun Any of various symbols (see the table below) used in writing and printing to make the sense of what is written easier to determine …

    Wiktionary

  • 42punctuation mark — marks used in writing to make the meaning clear (i.e. periods, commas, etc.) …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 43Quotation mark — This article is about quotation marks in English. For their use in other languages, see Non English usage of quotation marks. For their use in computer programming, see String literal. For the various glyphs used to render quotation marks, see… …

    Wikipedia

  • 44Exclamation mark — ! redirects here. For other uses, see ! (disambiguation). ! Exclamation mark Punctuation …

    Wikipedia

  • 45Chinese punctuation — uses a different set of punctuation marks from European languages. Chinese punctuation only became an integral part of the written language in the 20th century The first book to be printed with modern punctuation was Outline of the History of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 46Question mark — ? redirects here. For other uses, see Question mark (disambiguation). For the backwards or mirrored question mark used to indicate irony or sarcasm, see percontation point. For Wikipedia s help pages, see Help:Contents ? Question mark …

    Wikipedia

  • 47Chinese and Korean punctuation — Chinese punctuation uses a different set of punctuation marks from European languages. They only became an integral part of the written language relatively recently. Scholars did, however, annotate texts with symbols resembling the modern 。 and 、 …

    Wikipedia

  • 48Hebrew punctuation — Hebrew specific marks orthographically similar marks maqaf ־ …

    Wikipedia

  • 49Colon (punctuation) — Colon Punctuation apostrophe ( ’ …

    Wikipedia

  • 50Japanese punctuation — (約物, yakumono ) includes various written marks (besides characters and numbers), which differ from those found in European languages, as well as some not used in formal Japanese writing but frequently found in more casual writing, such as… …

    Wikipedia