Category:Unicode 2E00-2E7F Supplemental Punctuation

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<nowiki>Apéndice:Caracteres Unicode/Puntuación extra; 補助句読点; ponctuation complémentaire; Supplemental Punctuation; Appendix:ယူနဳကုဒ်/ဝါကျသင်္ကေတအဆက်တၞဟ်; Supplemental Punctuation; Дополнение к пунктуации; Supplemental Punctuation; Unicodeblock Zusätzliche Interpunktion; Phụ lục:Unicode/Supplemental Punctuation; Supplemental Punctuation; Unikodbloko Suplementaj Interpunkcioj; 追加標點; blok Unicoda – ločila, dodatek; блок стандарта Юникод; यूनिकोड खण्ड (U+2E00-2E7F); bloc Unicode (U+2E00-2E7F); Unicode block (U+2E00-2E7F); യൂണികോഡ് ബ്ലോക്ക് (U+2E00-2E7F); U+2E00-2E7F; U+2E00-2E7F; Unicode-Block Zusätzliche Interpunktion</nowiki>
Supplemental Punctuation 
Unicode block (U+2E00-2E7F)
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Followed by
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Character list
New Testament editorial symbols
Ancient Greek textual symbols
Ancient Near-Eastern linguistic symbol
General punctuation
Dictionary punctuation
These two punctuation marks are used mostly in German dictionaries, to indicate umlaut or case changes with abbreviated stems:
Brackets
These four brackets indicate ellipsis in certain conventions for Japanese transliteration:
Half brackets
These form a set of four corner brackets and are used editorially. They are distinguished from mathematical floor and ceiling characters in the range U+2308-230B, which also function as general-purpose quotation marks, or from CJK corner brackets in the range U+300C-300F, which function as wide quotation marks. Occasionally quine corners in the range U+231C-231F are substituted for half brackets.
Historic punctuation
See also historic punctuation with multiple dots in the range U+2058-205E:
Vertical tilde, used for Cyrillic yerik:
Ring point, used in Avestan:
Word separator middle dot, used in Avestan, Samaritan, ...:
Capitulum, ancestor form of the modern pilcrow sign:
⸿
Virgula suspensiva, indicates a medial disjunction more than solidus but less than punctus elevatus:
Triple dagger:
Medieval comma, indicates a minor medial pause or disjunction of sense:
Paragraphus mark, indicates the beginning of a paragraph, section, stanza, or proposition:
Punctus elevatus mark, indicates a major intermediate pause where the sensus is complete but the sentence is not; this is similar in some regards to the modern use of a semicolon:
Cornish verse divider:
Cross patty with right or left crossbar
Tironian sign capital ET:
Medieval marks:
Reversed punctuation
Historic punctus percontativus:
Reversed commas:
Palaeotype transliteration symbol
Turned punctuation marks:
Raised punctuation marks:
Daggers, used to indicate retracted, advanced or retroflex pronunciation:
Top half section sign:
Dashes
These long dashes are shown in the Unicode code charts inside dashed square boxes because of their width. In production fonts they would simply display as extra-wide (2em and 3em) dashes.
Alternate forms of punctuation
Used in stenography:
Vertical forms:
Double hyphen
The double hyphen is used in transcription of old German manuscripts, and occasionally as a non-standard punctuation mark. It is not intended for the representation of normal hyphens, whose doubled forms in Fraktur text are considered glyphic variants.
Miscellaneous punctuation
Typicon punctuation
Parentheses top and bottom halves
These are used in pairs in extended IPA to indicate dubious phonemes or questionable presence of a sound.
Oblique hyphen
The oblique hyphen is historic punctuation seen in some medieval and Renaissance manuscripts. In some modern lexicography an oblique hyphen is used distinctly to indicate hyphenation which is retained when a word is not broken at a line boundary.

Subcategories

This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.

U

Media in category "Unicode 2E00-2E7F Supplemental Punctuation"

The following 63 files are in this category, out of 63 total.