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Dot, DoT or DOT may refer to: == Typography == * Full stop, also called ''period'' in American English, used as a sentence terminator and as a decimal mark (decimal point) in numerals ( . ) * Interpunct (·), between words, also called ''middle dot'' or ''centered dot''. Homoglyphic characters include: * * dot operator, used as notation for multiplication ( (unicode:⋅) ) * * word separator middle dot, used in Avestan, Samaritan ( (unicode:⸱) ) * * Georgian comma * * Greek άνω τελεία, i.e. "high stop", the equivalent of the semicolon ((unicode:·)) * * Katakana middle dot ( (unicode:・) ) * * Separator for double 'l' sound in written Catalan (l·l) * Dot (diacritic), above or below a character (e.g. (unicode:ȧ), (unicode:ạ), (unicode:İ), (unicode:Ċ), (unicode:ċ), etc.) ( (unicode:˙) (unicode: ̣) (unicode:﮲) (unicode:﮳) ) * * Hebrew shin and sin dots ((unicode: ׁ) (unicode: ׂ)) as well as upper and lower dots ( (unicode: ׄ) (unicode: ׅ) ) * * Syriac feminine dot ( (unicode: ݀) ) * * Devanagari high spacing dot ( (unicode:ॱ) ) * * Myanmar dot below ( (unicode: ့) ) * * Canadian syllabics final middle dot ( (unicode:ᐧ) ) * * Canadian syllabics final raised dot ( (unicode:ᣟ) ) * * Vedic tone dot below ( (unicode: ᳝)) * * One dot leader, also used as Armenian semi-colon ( (unicode:․) ) * * The dot above, used to denote time derivation, in Newtonian notation * * There are also double, triple, quadruple and even quintuple diacritic dots * Three horizontal dots "…" or "...", an ellipsis * The Gregg shorthand system utilizes a dot in several ways, such as to represent ''a'' or ''an'' and the letter ''h'' 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Dot」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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