Colon (punctuation)



         


Punctuation marks |- | apostrophe (' )
parentheses ( ( ) ),
brackets ( [ ] ); ( { } ); ( < > )
colon ( : )
comma ( , )
dash ( ); ( ); ( ); ( )
ellipsis ( ) ( ... )
exclamation mark ( ! ); ( ¡ ! )
full stop/period ( . )
hyphen ( - ); ( )
interrobang ( )
question mark ( ? ); ( ¿ ? )
quotation marks ( ‘ ’ ); ( “ ” );
    ( ‚ ’ ); ( „ ” ); ( ‚ ‘ ); ( „ “ );
    ( ‹ › ); ( « » ); ( › ‹ ); ( » « );
    ( 「 」 ); ( 『 』 )
semicolon ( ; )
slash ( / ) and backslash ( \ )
space (   ) and interpunct ( ยท ) |- | ampersand ( & )
asterisk ( * ) and dagger ( † ‡)
bullet ( , more )
commercial at ( @ )
number sign ( # )
prime ( ′ ) and double prime (″)
tilde ( ~ )
underscore ( _ )
vertical bar / pipe ( | )
|} A colon is a punctuation mark, with one dot above another, like this: ":".

Colons are commonly used to introduce lists, or to connect a broad idea with a specific example: two related sentences can be separated by colons instead of periods. A colon can only be used if the clause preceding the colon is independent.

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Examples

The United Kingdom comprises four countries: England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Speech is silver: silence is golden.
She had not eaten since breakfast: she'd worked through her lunch break.

Also use the colon...

After the salutation of a business letter (in US practice).
In the heading of a business memo.
Between the hour and the minutes when telling time.
Between chapter and verse in the Bible, between volume and number in publications, and between title and subtitle.
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Mathematics

The colon is also used in mathematics to indicate ratio, and is also the standard sign for division in most non-English-speaking countries. In mathematical logic the colon is often used to represent "such that" in a relational phrase from predicate calculus. Unicode provides ratio U+2236 (&#8758;, ∶) for such mathematical usage if the distinction is required.

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Time

The colon separates the hour from the minute.

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Linguistics

A special triangular colon symbol is used in IPA to indicate a preceding long vowel. It is available in Unicode as Modifier letter triangular colon Unicode U+02D0 (&#720;, ː). A regular colon is often used as a fallback when this character is not available.

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Computer representation

In computer science, the colon character corresponds to the decimal value 58 (hexadecimal value 3A) in Unicode and ASCII character encodings.

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Other meanings

See Colon, the disambiguation page.





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