There is no specific punctuation, you just write it as part of your sentence.
"I need half a litre"
"I used three quarters/seven eighths/eighteen twenty-sixths or that bottle"
or whichever fraction you want to use, I'm not sure if this answers your question, but that's the understanding I got from it.
an apostrophe is a punctuation mark.
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.
It means: comma (as in punctuation) OR a coma as in a state of unconsciousness.
This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
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.
slash (/) Examples : 3/4, 2/7
an apostrophe is a punctuation mark.
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.
It means: comma (as in punctuation) OR a coma as in a state of unconsciousness.
This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
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.
Typically, one space is used after a punctuation mark in most writing styles. However, some modern style guides suggest using only one space after a punctuation mark, especially with the prevalence of digital writing and typesetting. It is essential to be consistent with spacing throughout a document or text.
Periods, commas, question marks, and others are in the grouping of writing called, "Punctuation".
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"
Yes, Chinese does have punctuation marks, including full stop (。), comma (,), question mark (?), exclamation mark (!), quotation marks (「」), and others. These punctuation marks are used to clarify sentence structures and indicate pauses or emphasis in writing.
Question mark. That is a stupid question.
A colon. In colloquial writing a dash (--) may be used, but this is not acceptable in formal writing.