It's a caret. It's a caret.
I'm not completely sure but I believe it's called a "tilde"
This is not a punctuation mark in standard English. This is more used in note-taking and formal logic. It is used to denote the word "therefore."
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.
An ellipse looks like three dots or periods: ...
no
The name of the punctuation mark with a dot directly above a comma is called a "semicolon."
Most of them are down in the lower right corner. The comma, period, slash and question mark are there, with the colon, semicolon and quotes; the exclamation point is at the upper left, generally shift-1. Other special characters are across the shifted numbers.
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.
The different punctuation at the end of a sentence are mostly period ("."), Question mark ("?"), Exclamation mark ("!").
Period is the punctuation mark for titles of a person. Examples: Dr. - Doctor Engr. - Engineer
The punctuation mark of three dots is called an ellipsis. It is used to indicate a pause or omission in a sentence.
The punctuation mark below the quotation mark is called an "underline" or "underscore." It is often used in academic writing to emphasize or highlight a specific word or phrase within the quotation.
If it is to the left of the 1 key it is called the tilde key
This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
End mark is a synonym for punctuation mark
I'm not completely sure but I believe it's called a "tilde"
an apostrophe is a punctuation mark.