punctuation-mark

  • 61inverted question mark — noun The symbol ¿ , which often serves as a punctuation mark in Spanish …

    Wiktionary

  • 62irony mark — noun The proposed punctuation mark ؟ or ⸮, used to suggest irony or sarcasm in a question …

    Wiktionary

  • 63exclamation mark — n. punctuation mark used after an interjection or exclamation to indicate emphasis (!) …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 64exclamation mark — (N. Amer. exclamation point) noun a punctuation mark (!) indicating an exclamation …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 65question mark — noun a punctuation mark (?) indicating a question …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 66Chinese 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

  • 67Chinese 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

  • 68Quotation mark glyphs — For the meaning and usage of quotation marks in the English language see Quotation mark and in other languages see Quotation mark, non English usage. ‘ ’ “ ” ‘ ’ “ ” ‹ › …

    Wikipedia

  • 69Ditto mark — 〃 Ditto mark Punctuation apostrophe ( …

    Wikipedia

  • 70question mark —  has become an overworked embellishment of the expression a question hanging over, which is itself wearyingly overused. Consider: The case... has raised a question mark over the competence of British security (The Times). Would you say of a happy …

    Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors