i think a good example would be PUICE
Curly Braces or brackets
Curly Braces or brackets
Hyphens, brackets, semi-colons, ellipses and colons.
With a few added commas, hyphens, or spaces, those could be the first 7 terms of the Fibonacci Series.
WikiAnswers wishes for you to use commas and proper punctuation in your answers, but only question marks and a few other symbols are allowed in asking questions. The use of periods and hyphens are sometimes allowed, as well as other specialized characters such as the degree ° symbol.
If you're using the phrase as an adjective (example "This easy-to-use remote is great!") then it will definitely need the hyphens. Otherwise, the hyphens are incorrect.
Nineteen billion, six hundred seventy-three million, eight hundred ninety thousand, ninety-four.
The drawings for the tools in most, if not all, of the workcells are incomplete.
The example would be: Molly collected sea shells, stuffed animals, and even snow globes!
If you're using the phrase as an adjective (example "I hate the end-of-the-year audit!") then it will definitely need the hyphens. Otherwise, the hyphens are incorrect.
No. Use hyphens when creating a compound adjective, for example a two-foot width or a four-foot depth.
No, names are not set off with commas unless they are part of a list or if a title follows the name. For example, "John Smith" or "Dr. Jane Doe" do not require commas.