Presumably, you mean the accent above the "e" ( René) - several languages use them; essentially they are guides to pronunciation - René comes from the French (meaning reborn) and it indicates that the accented "e" is to be pronounced distinctly and and with an "a" sound - so René is pronounced ren-a.
In Greek, an accent above a vowel indicates that letter is given emphasis.
I don’t know
It's a caret. It's a caret.
Riddle: What is the world's longest punctuation mark? Answer: The one hundred meter dash.
This *might* be referring to end punctuation, i.e. the punctuation mark at the end of a sentence or question. It might be a period, a question mark, an exclamation mark.
hell no
The punctuation mark that should be used in the social security number is the hyphen.
AN ACUTE ACCENT
The mark above a short vowel is called a breve. It is used to indicate that the vowel is pronounced as a short sound.
The name of the punctuation mark with a dot directly above a comma is called a "semicolon."
It is called a punctuation mark. Punctuation marks are used in writing to help convey meaning and indicate pauses, emphasis, or structure within sentences. Pronunciation marks are not commonly used terminology in language and grammar.
End mark is a synonym for punctuation mark
Yes, an apostrophe is a punctuation mark used to indicate either possession or contraction in writing.
It's a caret. It's a caret.
There is no single punctuation mark that all nouns carry.
Traditional Japanese haiku typically do not use punctuation. However, modern haiku in English may include punctuation for clarity or emphasis.
No. A comma is a punctuation mark.
what punctuation mark placed after a greeting in email
question mark