Semi-colon.
A semicolon signals a major division in a sentence. It is stronger than a comma as it separates independent clauses that are closely related but not closely enough to be in the same sentence. It is not as strong as a colon or a period, which indicate a greater separation of ideas.
qoutation marks
Sentence signals help convey our tone, intention, and emotions in written communication. They provide cues to the reader on how to interpret the message and understand the underlying meaning. Using sentence signals appropriately can prevent misinterpretation and promote effective communication.
The two common sentence signals for the end of a sentence are a period (.) and a question mark (?). A period is used for declarative and imperative sentences, while a question mark is used for interrogative sentences.
Ellipses in the middle of a quotation show the reader that words have been left out.
A period (.) at the end of a sentence indicates the end of a statement or sentence in written language. It helps to signal a pause and a completion of a thought.
Punctuation guides the flow of written language. Two examples of this are below: A period signals the end of a complete thought. A comma signals a pause.
A period in English punctuation signals a Full Stop. It indicates, that thought is finished. However, you can have other thoughts that follow that sentence.
A colon.
qoutation marks
chemical signals for cell division
A period (.) at the end of a sentence indicates the end of a statement or sentence in written language. It helps to signal a pause and a completion of a thought.
One basic internal signal that triggers Cell division is 'the size of the Cell'. External signals that do this exist...
FDM stnds for frequency division multiplexing and it is used only in case of analog signals because analog signals are continuous in nature and the signal have frequency. TDM-stands for time division multiplexing and it is used only in case of digital signals because digital signals are discrete in nature and are in the form of 0 and 1s. and are time dependent.
Frequency-division multiplexing and wavelength-division multiplexing
Frequency-division multiplexing, wavelength-division multiplexing, and time-division multiplexing.
Somatic sensory division...
The signals that go through the montems.