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An abbreviated form of the virgula, ⟨/⟩, used to indicate a pause. The modern form was first used by Aldus Manutius. The virgula replaced the earlier dot because dots differentiated only by height were difficult to distinguish in medieval minuscule text.
, (English name comma)
For quotations using this term, see Citations:,.
,
For quotations using this term, see Citations:,.
,
,
The punctuation mark is separated from the preceding word by a space.
Falling tone is otherwise unmarked. Glottal stop also occurs on syllables with high-falling tone, which is written ⟨ʼ⟩, but is unmarked in such cases.
,
A final glottal stop is unwritten on syllables with this tone. Thus aʼ transcribes both /a᷇/ and /a᷇ʔ/. Full falling tone is unmarked, except for syllables with a final glottal stop, which is transcribed ,.
,
The punctuation mark is separated from the preceding word by a space.
Falling tone is otherwise unmarked. Glottal stop with other tones is low ⟨;⟩ and high ⟨ʼ⟩.
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