1. (n) A piece of punctuation, one of a pair of square three sided figures which enclose, usually, an interpolation into a quotation. [This is enclosed by brackets]
2. (n) Figuratively, a range of things defined by limits like brackets, especially an "income bracket"
3. (v) To place on either side of something. Used especially in artillery spotting.
4. (n) A right angled support for a shelf, attached both to a wall and the bottom of the shelf.
There is a space before an opening bracket, but I am reasonably sure there is no space after the opening bracket. Neither is there one before the closing bracket.
Literal is word for word; verbatim
There is no such word in English, -it is gibberish.
doubed
I didn't mean it!I mean, seriously what's your problem?You are being so mean.
Use parentheses, then brackets, then parentheses, then brackets, and so on. Word (word [word], word [word (word)])
2
BinomialBisectorBrackets One word can be "binomial". Another word can be" bracket[s]"
It could mean the set of all real numbers excluding 0. For example, a set over which division is defined.
It's a bracket that holds guns.
Ten multiplied by open bracket, two point five plus thirteen point five, close bracket.
upright curved lines -parenthesisbrace - bracket
Pipe bracket.
No, the word "jacket" does not have a short "a" sound. It has a short "a" sound, as in the word "cat."
The distributive property of multiplication over addition states that a*(b + c) = a*b + a*c that is, the multiplication of the bracket by a can be distributed over the elements inside the bracket.
(a + 5) (a - 5) = a2 - 25
Bracket Fungi are attached with trees like a bracket .