..is a cursor. In text editing, this is sometimes called the insertion point or caret, which distinguishes it from the mouse cursor. Alternately, the mouse cursor is referred to as a pointer to eliminate confusion.
The cursor (also called the pointer) is the item on screen which marks the position of the mouse. When in a document the insertion point is where text will appear when you start to type on the keyboard it is usually a blinking vertical line. In a command line window it is a blinking underscore and also where input will appear (if allowed) In Microsoft Word there is no character that denotes the end of a line unless a hard line break has been set (Shift+Enter) the hard line break appears as an arrow that is bent down and to the left.
The tab key on your keyboard.
press shift and then 2
because it does
Speech marks " are obtained by holding down the SHIFT key, and pressing the number 2
Press the show/hide button on the keyboard.
To type in Hebrew, go to your control panel and select regional and language options, change keyboard, and then add the Hebrew keyboard. You can switch back and forth from the American keyboard to the Hebrew keyboard by hitting CTRL + SHIFT.As for pronunciation marks, I'm not sure what this is. Hebrew is a phonetic language.
Yes otherwise it would get your marks down for being wobbley
It marks the origin - the point where the horizontal and vertical axes cross.
The quotation marks on your computer may appear weird due to the default settings of the keyboard or the software you are using. You can adjust the settings to change the appearance of the quotation marks.
tick marks
Tally marks are a type of counting using vertical lines. One line means one, two means two, three means three, four means four, and then for the fifth line, it would go diagonal across the previous four lines, which would be five.