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Punctuation marks
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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 )
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ampersand ( & )
asterisk ( * ) and dagger ( † ‡)
bullet ( •, more )
commercial at ( @ )
number sign ( # )
prime ( ′ ) and double prime (″)
tilde ( ~ )
underscore ( _ )
vertical bar / pipe ( | )
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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.
Also use the colon...
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 (∶, ∶) for such mathematical usage if the distinction is required.
The colon separates the hour from the minute.
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 (ː, ː). A regular colon is often used as a fallback when this character is not available.
In computer science, the colon character corresponds to the decimal value 58 (hexadecimal value 3A) in Unicode and ASCII character encodings.
See Colon, the disambiguation page.