Both, in any case, however, because
An ellipsis is used when a word, phrase, or passage is omitted from a quote.
If you refer to extending and wiggling the first two fingers of each hand while saying a word or phrase, the gesture indicates that the word or phrase would be in quotation marks if printed on the page. The quotation marks indicate the sense of irony, or sarcasm, that tone of voice indicates in speech.
The word "hound" already indicates a dog, one used by hunters.The phrase is two words hound dog except that it was used as a single word for the title of a 2007 film.
there is no antynom for the word i guess
Antonym
in any case
"However" is a clue word that often indicates a contrast in a paragraph.
The Buddha.
"out of"
Yes, the word "by" is a prepositional phrase. No, the word "by" is a preposition; a prepositional phrase including the word "by" would be "... by the wayside."
It is a "rational number".
out of
An ellipsis is used when a word, phrase, or passage is omitted from a quote.
gloss
transitional words
first of all it is spelled "definition" and it is a formal passage describing the meaning of a term (a word or phrase).
Savage