Two parallel lines which are "wiggly", mean roughly equal to.
Could you please clarify which punctuation mark you are referring to?
In Portuguese, the squiggly line (~) is called a tilde. It is used to indicate nasalization of vowels, such as in the word "pão," which means bread. It can also be used as a diacritic mark in Spanish and other languages to signify a different pronunciation.
I think you mean ellipsis, which denotes a pause in speech. It is written as 3 full stop marks. Example: "Well...I guess that would be okay"
A dash is a punctuation mark used to separate or emphasize information in a sentence. It can indicate a pause, an interruption, or an abrupt change in thought.
It means: comma (as in punctuation) OR a coma as in a state of unconsciousness.
Could you please clarify which punctuation mark you are referring to?
this is and ampersand......&
It means to teach, and there's a tilde (squiggly line diacritical mark) over the n.
You are most likely referring to a quarter rest, which means to stop playing for the time assigned to a quarter in the given time signature. If it is a really long squiggly line then you might be looking at a glissando, which basically means to glide from the top note to the bottom note indicated by the mark.
It means congruent. It is NOT 'approximately equal', which would be an equal sigh where BOTH lines are squiggly.
Punctuation at the end of a sentence indicates a complete thought.
The squiggly line in music notation is called a trill. It indicates that the musician should rapidly alternate between the written note and the note above it.
The "squiggly line" over the n in "señor" (~) is called a tilde, a type of diacritical mark. In Spanish, the ñ is a separate letter of the Spanish alphabet, with a different pronunciation from a regular n. The Spanish ñ has a "ny" sound, while the Spanish regular n is pronounced much the same as in English.
In Portuguese, the squiggly line (~) is called a tilde. It is used to indicate nasalization of vowels, such as in the word "pão," which means bread. It can also be used as a diacritic mark in Spanish and other languages to signify a different pronunciation.
If you mean the n with a squiggly line on top, it's pronounced en-yay.
The word is mispelledA RED squiggly line means the word is misspelled. A GREEN squiggly line means that there is one or more extra space or tab characters that aren't grammatically needed.
A number of computer programs and phone apps have built in spell-checkers. If the word you have used is not one which the computer/phone recognizes, it marks it with a squiggly red line. This does not necessarily mean that you have spelled the word wrong: it could be a proper noun, or a slang word, or a spelling which is not used by the geek who created the program. The squiggly line is only an alert; you must decide if the word actually needs changing.