Commas, periods and question marks.
The transcript of his high school grades was impressive.
Either you do not put the correct punctuation, or you use too many punctuation marks, or you use none. All sentences, at minimum, must have a period. Pauses need a comma. Interrogatory needs a question mark.
Use colon.
full stop
The root word for "transcript" is "script"
Have you read the transcript? It was very useful.
Yes, you can use an unofficial transcript for your job application, but it is recommended to provide an official transcript if possible for verification purposes.
No punctuation mark is particularly faster than others.
It is written as and/or
All sentences use punctuation, if only a period at the end.
Open punctuation typically refers to the style of punctuation that uses minimal punctuation, often omitting periods and other marks at the end of a sentence. As such, it does not require the use of a specific letter.
In some cases, you may be able to use a transcript instead of a diploma for your application, but it depends on the specific requirements of the institution or organization you are applying to. It's best to check with them directly to see if a transcript is an acceptable alternative.
maybe because the cooperation does not allow the punctuation.
high school diploma will always look better.
Use commas to separate the elements in an address (e.g., street, city, state). There is no need to use punctuation at the end of each line in an address unless it is the last line.
it is sometimes indicated by a punctuation mark
I'd lead into it with an em-dash. It depends on where the correction is made in relation to when the 'error' was made "I think that the problems we face are two-fold — three-fold, I meant to say." If the error preceded the correction by ore than a few sentences, then I'd leave it to the reader to realise that the speaker has corrected himself/herself. Above all else a transcript must be an accurate portrayal of what was actually said. The only valid way to play with it is to use special punctuation to depict a pause, or you could use smething like "I think that the problem we face are two-fold (pause) three-fold, I meant to say."