Before.
Asterisk is dervied from the greek word "asteri", which means star. That is why the asterisk is star shaped.
All punctuation is before the asterisk.For example:This is a life-time warranty.* *Warranty does not protect against acts of war, internal uprising, domestic unrest, natural disasters, or acts of God.
() is not an asterisk. It is a pair of rounded brackets called parentheses. An asterisk is this symbol *.Asterisk comes from the Latin word "asteriscus" and and the Ancient Greek word "asteriskos" which means "little star". It is called this because an asterisk resembles a typical star.
An asterisk.
The asterisk symbol is generally used in sentences to indicate that more on the subject can be found elsewhere on the page or in the work, or as a place-marker for missing letters. An example of the word asterisk used in a sentence would be: I saw an asterisk next to the last word in the paragraph, but I couldn't find the accompanying footnote.
Asterisk is dervied from the greek word "asteri", which means star. That is why the asterisk is star shaped.
you put the asterisk right before the semicolon
The word asterisk is a noun. It is the name of the symbol. The symbol itself (*) is just that, a symbol.
All punctuation is before the asterisk.For example:This is a life-time warranty.* *Warranty does not protect against acts of war, internal uprising, domestic unrest, natural disasters, or acts of God.
() is not an asterisk. It is a pair of rounded brackets called parentheses. An asterisk is this symbol *.Asterisk comes from the Latin word "asteriscus" and and the Ancient Greek word "asteriskos" which means "little star". It is called this because an asterisk resembles a typical star.
Depending on the situation or sentence in which it is used, a colon could go before or after an asterisk.
"An asterisk always accompanies the word it is highlighting. Punctuation would come after the asterisk." I believe this answer is correct for British English but it is wrong in regards to American English. According to the MLA and APA, superscripts such as asterisks come after the punctuation mark with the exception being dashes. When a long dash is used the superscript comes before the dash. For example: These pies contain cardamom,* clove, and nutmeg. *seeds only And: All of my jobs*--landscaping, cooking, and tending bar--are based heavily on tips. *Jobs also are unreported It should also be noted that asterisks are not considered correct form for signifying footnotes in MLA and numbers should be used.
The word "the" comes before the word "before" in the phrase "the calm before the storm."
Another asterisk with added information.
Three.
The word that means star shaped mark in Greek is "asterisk." It comes from the Greek word "asteriskos," which means little star.
An asterisk.