comma
suomi-englanti sanakirjacomma englannista suomeksi
herukkaperhonen
pilkku
Substantiivi
Verbi
comma englanniksi
(senseid) The punctuation mark ⟨,⟩ used to indicate a set of parts of a sentence or between elements of a list.
(syn)
(hypo)
1828, Richard Thomson, https://books.google.co.jp/books?id=IyUNAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover ''Illustrations of the History of Great Britain'', Vol. II, pp. 145–6:
- No points were used by the ancient printers, excepting the colon and the period; but, after some time, a short stroke, called a virgil, was introduced, which answered to the modern comma. In the fifteenth century this punctuation was improved by the famous Aldus Manutius with the typographical art in general; when he gave a better shape to the comma, added the semicolon, and assigned to the former points more proper places.
Any of various nymphalid butterflies of the genus (taxfmt), having a comma-shaped white mark on the underwings, especially (taxlink) and (taxlink) of North Africa, Europe, and Asia.
(quote-book)
(quote-book)| year=2013| page=91| pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=rnZBBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA91| isbn=978-0-7627-7076-2| passage=Other members of this genus that are frequently encountered in the park are the eastern comma (''P. comma'') and question mark (''P. interrogationis'').
A difference in the calculation of nearly identical intervals by different ways.
In Greek rhetoric, a short clause, something less than a colon, originally denoted by comma marks. In antiquity it was defined as a combination of words having no more than eight syllables in all. It was later applied to longer phrases, e.g. the (w).
(l)
(inflection of)
(ux)
:
a (l) (gloss), (l), or (l) of a (l) smaller than a (l)
a comma (gloss)
a (l)