This article needs additional citations for verification.(March 2022) |
A bracket is either of two tall fore- or back-facing punctuation marks commonly used to isolate a segment of text or data from its surroundings. They come in four main pairs of shapes, as given in the box to the right, which also gives their names, that vary between British and American English. "Brackets", without further qualification, are in British English the (...) marks and in American English the [...] marks.
Brackets | |
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Other symbols are repurposed as brackets in specialist contexts, such as those used by linguists.
Brackets are typically deployed in symmetric pairs, and an individual bracket may be identified as a 'left' or 'right' bracket or, alternatively, an "opening bracket" or "closing bracket", respectively, depending on the directionality of the context.
In casual writing and in technical fields such as computing or linguistic analysis of grammar, brackets nest, with segments of bracketed material containing embedded within them other further bracketed sub-segments. The number of opening brackets matches the number of closing brackets in such cases.
Various forms of brackets are used in mathematics, with specific mathematical meanings, often for denoting specific mathematical functions and subformulas.
History
Angle brackets or chevrons ⟨ ⟩ were the earliest type of bracket to appear in written English. Erasmus coined the term lunula to refer to the round brackets or parentheses ( ) recalling the shape of the crescent moon (Latin: luna).
Most typewriters only had the left and right parentheses. Square brackets appeared with some teleprinters.
Braces (curly brackets) first became part of a character set with the 8-bit code of the IBM 7030 Stretch.
In 1961, ASCII contained parentheses, square, and curly brackets, and also less-than and greater-than signs that could be used as angle brackets.
Typography
In English, typographers mostly prefer not to set brackets in italics, even when the enclosed text is italic. However, in other languages like German, if brackets enclose text in italics, they are usually also set in italics.
Parentheses or round brackets
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Parenthesis | |
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In Unicode | |
Arabic script (Quranic quotations)
Mediaeval studies
Technical
Phonetic punctuation
Dingbats
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( and ) are parentheses /pəˈrɛnθɪsiːz/ (singular parenthesis /pəˈrɛnθɪsɪs/) in American English, and either round brackets or simply brackets in British English. They are also known as "parens" /pəˈrɛnz/, "circle brackets", or "smooth brackets".
In formal writing, "parentheses" is also used in British English.[citation needed]
Uses of ( )
Parentheses contain adjunctive material that serves to clarify (in the manner of a gloss) or is aside from the main point.
A comma before or after the material can also be used, though if the sentence contains commas for other purposes, visual confusion may result. A dash before and after the material is also sometimes used.
Parentheses may be used in formal writing to add supplementary information, such as "Senator John McCain (R - Arizona) spoke at length". They can also indicate shorthand for "either singular or plural" for nouns, e.g. "the claim(s)". It can also be used for gender-neutral language, especially in languages with grammatical gender, e.g. "(s)he agreed with his/her physician" (the slash in the second instance, as one alternative is replacing the other, not adding to it).
Parenthetical phrases have been used extensively in informal writing and stream of consciousness literature. Examples include the southern American author William Faulkner (see Absalom, Absalom! and the Quentin section of The Sound and the Fury) as well as poet E. E. Cummings.
Parentheses have historically been used where the em dash is currently used in alternatives, such as "parenthesis)(parentheses". Examples of this usage can be seen in editions of Fowler's Dictionary of Modern English Usage.
Parentheses may be nested (generally with one set (such as this) inside another set). This is not commonly used in formal writing (though sometimes other brackets [especially square brackets] will be used for one or more inner set of parentheses [in other words, secondary {or even tertiary} phrases can be found within the main parenthetical sentence]).
Language
A parenthesis in rhetoric and linguistics refers to the entire bracketed text, not just to the enclosing marks used (so all the text in this set of round brackets may be described as "a parenthesis"). Taking as an example the sentence "Mrs. Pennyfarthing (What? Yes, that was her name!) was my landlady.", the explanatory phrase between the parentheses is itself called a parenthesis. Again, the parenthesis implies that the meaning and flow of the bracketed phrase is supplemental to the rest of the text and the whole would be unchanged were the parenthesized sentences removed. The term refers to the syntax rather than the enclosure method: the same clause in the form "Mrs. Pennyfarthing – What? Yes, that was her name! – was my landlady" is also a parenthesis. (In non-specialist usage, the term "parenthetical phrase" is more widely understood.)
In phonetics, parentheses are used for indistinguishable or unidentified utterances. They are also seen for silent articulation (mouthing), where the expected phonetic transcription is derived from lip-reading, and with periods to indicate silent pauses, for example (...) or (2 sec).
Enumerations
An unpaired right parenthesis is often used as part of a label in an ordered list, such as this one:
a) educational testing,
b) technical writing and diagrams,
c) market research, and
d) elections.
Accounting
Traditionally in accounting, contra amounts are placed in parentheses. A debit balance account in a series of credit balances will have parenthesis and vice versa.
Parentheses in mathematics
Parentheses are used in mathematical notation to indicate grouping, often inducing a different order of operations. For example: in the usual order of algebraic operations, 4 × 3 + 2 equals 14, since the multiplication is done before the addition. However, 4 × (3 + 2) equals 20, because the parentheses override normal precedence, causing the addition to be done first. Some authors follow the convention in mathematical equations that, when parentheses have one level of nesting, the inner pair are parentheses and the outer pair are square brackets. Example:
Parentheses in programming languages
Parentheses are included in the syntaxes of many programming languages. Typically needed to denote an argument; to tell the compiler what data type the Method/Function needs to look for first in order to initialise. In some cases, such as in LISP, parentheses are a fundamental construct of the language. They are also often used for scoping functions and operators and for arrays. In syntax diagrams they are used for grouping, such as in extended Backus–Naur form.
In Mathematica and the Wolfram language, parentheses are used to indicate grouping – for example, with pure anonymous functions.
Taxonomy
If it is desired to include the subgenus when giving the scientific name of an animal species or subspecies, the subgenus's name is provided in parentheses between the genus name and the specific epithet. For instance, Polyphylla (Xerasiobia) alba is a way to cite the species Polyphylla alba while also mentioning that it is in the subgenus Xerasiobia. There is also a convention of citing a subgenus by enclosing it in parentheses after its genus, e.g., Polyphylla (Xerasiobia) is a way to refer to the subgenus Xerasiobia within the genus Polyphylla. Parentheses are similarly used to cite a subgenus with the name of a prokaryotic species, although the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes (ICNP) requires the use of the abbreviation "subgen". as well, e.g., Acetobacter (subgen. Gluconoacetobacter) liquefaciens.
Chemistry
Parentheses are used in chemistry to denote a repeated substructure within a molecule, e.g. HC(CH3)3 (isobutane) or, similarly, to indicate the stoichiometry of ionic compounds with such substructures: e.g. Ca(NO3)2 (calcium nitrate).
This is a notation that was pioneered by Berzelius, who wanted chemical formulae to more resemble algebraic notation, with brackets enclosing groups that could be multiplied (e.g. in 3(AlO2 + 2SO3) the 3 multiplies everything within the parentheses).
In chemical nomenclature, parentheses are used to distinguish structural features and multipliers for clarity, for example in the polymer poly(methyl methacrylate).
Square brackets
Square brackets | |||
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Mediaeval studies
Technical/Mathematical
Phonetic punctuation
Quotation (East-Asian texts)
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[ and ] are square brackets in both British and American English, but are also more simply brackets in the latter. An older name for these brackets is "crotchets".
Uses of [ ]
Square brackets are often used to insert explanatory material or to mark where a [word or] passage was omitted from an original material by someone other than the original author, or to mark modifications in quotations. In transcribed interviews, sounds, responses and reactions that are not words but that can be described are set off in square brackets — "... [laughs] ...".
When quoted material is in any way altered, the alterations are enclosed in square brackets within the quotation to show that the quotation is not exactly as given, or to add an annotation. For example: The Plaintiff asserted his cause is just, stating,
[m]y causes is [sic] just.
In the original quoted sentence, the word "my" was capitalized: it has been modified in the quotation given and the change signalled with brackets. Similarly, where the quotation contained a grammatical error (is/are), the quoting author signalled that the error was in the original with "[sic]" (Latin for 'thus').
A bracketed ellipsis, [...], is often used to indicate omitted material: "I'd like to thank [several unimportant people] for their tolerance [...]" Bracketed comments inserted into a quote indicate where the original has been modified for clarity: "I appreciate it [the honor], but I must refuse", and "the future of psionics [see definition] is in doubt". Or one can quote the original statement "I hate to do laundry" with a (sometimes grammatical) modification inserted: He "hate[s] to do laundry".
Additionally, a small letter can be replaced by a capital one, when the beginning of the original printed text is being quoted in another piece of text or when the original text has been omitted for succinctness— for example, when referring to a verbose original: "To the extent that policymakers and elite opinion in general have made use of economic analysis at all, they have, as the saying goes, done so the way a drunkard uses a lamppost: for support, not illumination", can be quoted succinctly as: "[P]olicymakers [...] have made use of economic analysis [...] the way a drunkard uses a lamppost: for support, not illumination." When nested parentheses are needed, brackets are sometimes used as a substitute for the inner pair of parentheses within the outer pair. When deeper levels of nesting are needed, convention is to alternate between parentheses and brackets at each level.
Alternatively, empty square brackets can also indicate omitted material, usually single letter only. The original, "Reading is also a process and it also changes you." can be rewritten in a quote as: It has been suggested that reading can "also change[] you".
In translated works, brackets are used to signify the same word or phrase in the original language to avoid ambiguity. For example: He is trained in the way of the open hand [karate].
Style and usage guides originating in the news industry of the twentieth century, such as the AP Stylebook, recommend against the use of square brackets because "They cannot be transmitted over news wires." However, this guidance has little relevance outside of the technological constraints of the industry and era.
In linguistics, phonetic transcriptions are generally enclosed within square brackets, whereas phonemic transcriptions typically use paired slashes, according to International Phonetic Alphabet rules. Pipes (| |) are often used to indicate a morphophonemic rather than phonemic representation. Other conventions are double slashes (⫽ ⫽), double pipes (‖ ‖) and curly brackets ({ }).
In lexicography, square brackets usually surround the section of a dictionary entry which contains the etymology of the word the entry defines.
Proofreading
Brackets (called move-left symbols or move right symbols) are added to the sides of text in proofreading to indicate changes in indentation:
Move left | [To Fate I sue, of other means bereft, the only refuge for the wretched left. |
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Center | ]Paradise Lost[ |
Move up |
Square brackets are used to denote parts of the text that need to be checked when preparing drafts prior to finalizing a document.
Law
Square brackets are used in some countries in the citation of law reports to identify parallel citations to non-official reporters. For example:
Chronicle Pub. Co. v Superior Court (1998) 54 Cal.2d 548, [7 Cal.Rptr. 109]
In some other countries (such as England and Wales), square brackets are used to indicate that the year is part of the citation and parentheses are used to indicate the year the judgment was given. For example:
National Coal Board v England [1954] AC 403
This case is in the 1954 volume of the Appeal Cases reports, although the decision may have been given in 1953 or earlier. Compare with:
(1954) 98 Sol Jo 176
This citation reports a decision from 1954, in volume 98 of the Solicitors Journal which may be published in 1955 or later.
They often denote points that have not yet been agreed to in legal drafts and the year in which a report was made for certain case law decisions.
Square brackets in mathematics
Brackets are used in mathematics in a variety of notations, including standard notations for commutators, the floor function, the Lie bracket, equivalence classes, the Iverson bracket, and matrices.
Square brackets may be used exclusively or in combination with parentheses to represent intervals as interval notation. For example, [0,5] represents the set of real numbers from 0 to 5 inclusive. Both parentheses and brackets are used to denote a half-open interval; [5, 12) would be the set of all real numbers between 5 and 12, including 5 but not 12. The numbers may come as close as they like to 12, including 11.999 and so forth, but 12.0 is not included. In some European countries, the notation [5, 12[ is also used. The endpoint adjoining the square bracket is known as closed, whereas the endpoint adjoining the parenthesis is known as open.
In group theory and ring theory, brackets denote the commutator. In group theory, the commutator [g, h] is commonly defined as g −1 h −1 g h . In ring theory, the commutator [a, b] is defined as a b − b a .
Chemistry
Square brackets can also be used in chemistry to represent the concentration of a chemical substance in solution and to denote charge a Lewis structure of an ion (particularly distributed charge in a complex ion), repeating chemical units (particularly in polymers) and transition state structures, among other uses.
Square brackets in programming languages
Brackets are used in many computer programming languages, primarily for array indexing. But they are also used to denote general tuples, sets and other structures, just as in mathematics. There may be several other uses as well, depending on the language at hand. In syntax diagrams they are used for optional portions, such as in extended Backus–Naur form.
Double brackets ⟦ ⟧
Double brackets (or white square brackets or Scott brackets), ⟦ ⟧, are used to indicate the semantic evaluation function in formal semantics for natural language and denotational semantics for programming languages. In the Wolfram Language, double brackets, either as iterated single brackets ([[) or ligatures (〚) are used for list indexing.
The brackets stand for a function that maps a linguistic expression to its "denotation" or semantic value. In mathematics, double brackets may also be used to denote intervals of integers or, less often, the floor function. In papyrology, following the Leiden Conventions, they are used to enclose text that has been deleted in antiquity.
Lenticular brackets【】
Some East Asian languages use lenticular brackets 【 】, a combination of square brackets and round brackets called 方頭括號 (fāngtóu kuòhào) in Chinese and 隅付き括弧 (sumitsuki kakko) in Japanese. They are used in titles and headings in both Chinese and Japanese. On the Internet, they are used to emphasize a text. In Japanese, they are most frequently seen in dictionaries for quoting Chinese characters and Sino-Japanese loanwords.
Floor ⌊ ⌋ and ceiling ⌈ ⌉ corner brackets
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The floor corner brackets ⌊ and ⌋, the ceiling corner brackets ⌈ and ⌉ (U+2308, U+2309) are used to denote the integer floor and ceiling functions.
Quine corners ⌜⌝ and half brackets ⸤ ⸥ or ⸢ ⸣
The Quine corners ⌜ and ⌝ have at least two uses in mathematical logic: either as quasi-quotation, a generalization of quotation marks, or to denote the Gödel number of the enclosed expression.
Half brackets are used in English to mark added text, such as in translations: "Bill saw ⸤her⸥".
In editions of papyrological texts, half brackets, ⸤ and ⸥ or ⸢ and ⸣, enclose text which is lacking in the papyrus due to damage, but can be restored by virtue of another source, such as an ancient quotation of the text transmitted by the papyrus. For example, Callimachus Iambus 1.2 reads: ἐκ τῶν ὅκου βοῦν κολλύ⸤βου π⸥ιπρήσκουσιν. A hole in the papyrus has obliterated βου π, but these letters are supplied by an ancient commentary on the poem. Second intermittent sources can be between ⸢ and ⸣. Quine corners are sometimes used instead of half brackets.
Brackets with quills ⁅ ⁆
Known as "spike parentheses" (Swedish: piggparenteser), ⁅
and ⁆
are used in Swedish bilingual dictionaries to enclose supplemental constructions.
Curly brackets
Curly brackets | |||
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Technical/Mathematical (half-width)
Dingbats
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{ and } are curly brackets or braces in both American and British English.
Uses of { }
Curly brackets are used by text editors to mark editorial insertions or interpolations.
Braces used to be used to connect multiple lines of poetry, such as triplets in a poem of rhyming couplets, although this usage had gone out of fashion by the 19th century.
Another older use in prose was to eliminate duplication in lists and tables. Two examples here from Charles Hutton's 19th century table of weights and measures in his A Course of Mathematics:
In this kingdom The standard of ... ⎧ ⎪ ⎨ ⎪ ⎩
Length is a Yard. Surface is a Square Yard, the 1⁄4840 of an Acre. ⎰ Solidity is a Cubic Yard. ⎱ Capacity is a Gallon. Weight is a Pound.
Imperial measure of CAPACITY for coals, culm, lime, fish, potatoes, fruit,– and other goods commonly sold by heaped measure: 2 Gallons = 1 Peck = 764 ⎱ Cubic Inches, nearly 8 Gallons = 1 Bushel = 2813+1⁄2 ⎰ 3 Bushels = 1 Sack = 4+8⁄9 ⎱ Cubic Feet, nearly 12 Sacks = 1 Chald. = 58+2⁄3 ⎰
As an extension to the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), braces are used for prosodic notation.
Music
In music, they are known as "accolades" or "braces", and connect two or more lines (staves) of music that are played simultaneously.
Chemistry
The use of braces in chemistry is an old notation that has long since been superseded by subscripted numbers. The chemical formula for water, H2O, was represented as .
Curly brackets in programming languages
In many programming languages, curly brackets enclose groups of statements and create a local scope. Such languages (C, C#, C++ and many others) are therefore called curly bracket languages. They are also used to define structures and enumerated type in these languages.
In various Unix shells, they enclose a group of strings that are used in a process known as brace expansion, where each successive string in the group is interpolated at that point in the command line to generate the command-line's final form. The mechanism originated in the C shell and the string generation mechanism is a simple interpolation that can occur anywhere in a command line and takes no account of existing filenames.
In syntax diagrams they are used for repetition, such as in extended Backus–Naur form.
In the Z formal specification language, braces define a set.
Curly brackets in mathematics
In mathematics they delimit sets, in what is called set notation. Braces enclose either a literal list of set elements, or a rule that defines the set elements. For example:
- S = {a, b} defines a set S containing a and b.
- S = {x | x > 0} defines a set S containing elements (implied to be numbers) x0, x1, and so on where every xn satisfies the rule that it is greater than zero.
They are often also used to denote the Poisson bracket between two quantities.
In ring theory, braces denote the anticommutator where {a, b} is defined as a b + b a .
Angle brackets
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Angle brackets | |||||||
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Technical/Mathematical (half-width)
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The symbols ⟨ and ⟩ are angle brackets in both American and British English. In (largely archaic) computer slang, they were sometimes known as "brokets".
Strictly speaking they are distinct from V-shaped chevrons, as they have (where the typography permits it) a broader span than chevrons, although when printed often no visual distinction is made.
The ASCII less-than and greater-than characters < and > are often used for angle brackets. In many cases, only those characters are accepted by computer programs, and the Unicode angle brackets are not recognized (for instance, in HTML tags). The characters for "single" guillemets (‹ and ›) are also often used, and sometimes normal guillemets (« and ») when nested angle brackets are needed.
The angle brackets or chevrons U+27E8 ⟨ MATHEMATICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET and U+27E9 ⟩ MATHEMATICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET are for mathematical use and Western languages, whereas U+3008 〈 LEFT ANGLE BRACKET and U+3009 〉 RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET are for East Asian languages. The chevrons at U+2329 and U+232A are deprecated in favour of the U+3008 and U+3009 East Asian angle brackets. Unicode discourages their use for mathematics and in Western texts, because they are canonically equivalent to the CJK code points U+300n and thus likely to render as double-width symbols. The less-than and greater-than symbols are often used as replacements for chevrons.
- ⟨ and ⟩ were tied to the deprecated symbols U+2329 and U+232A in HTML4 and MathML2, but are being migrated to U+27E8 and U+27E9 for HTML5 and MathML3, as defined in XML Entity Definitions for Characters (Archived 27 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine).
Shape
Angle brackets are larger than less-than and greater-than signs, which in turn are larger than guillemets.
Uses of ⟨ ⟩
Angle brackets are infrequently used to denote words that are thought instead of spoken, such as:
- ⟨What an unusual flower!⟩
In textual criticism, and hence in many editions of pre-modern works, chevrons denote sections of the text which are illegible or otherwise lost; the editor will often insert their own reconstruction where possible within them.
In comic books, chevrons are often used to mark dialogue that has been translated notionally from another language; in other words, if a character is speaking another language, instead of writing in the other language and providing a translation, one writes the translated text within chevrons. Since no foreign language is actually written, this is only notionally translated.[citation needed]
In linguistics, angle brackets identify graphemes (e.g., letters of an alphabet) or orthography, as in "The English word /kæt/ is spelled ⟨cat⟩."
In epigraphy, they may be used for mechanical transliterations of a text into the Latin script.
In East Asian punctuation, angle brackets are used as quotation marks. Chevron-like symbols are part of standard Chinese, Japanese and – less frequently – Korean punctuation, where they generally enclose the titles of books, as: 〈 ︙ 〉 or 《 ︙ 》 for traditional vertical printing — written in vertical lines — and as 〈 ... 〉 or 《 ... 》 for horizontal printing — in horizontal.
Angle brackets in mathematics
Angle brackets (or 'chevrons') are used in group theory to write group presentations, and to denote the subgroup generated by a collection of elements. In set theory, chevrons or parentheses are used to denote ordered pairs and other tuples, whereas curly brackets are used for unordered sets.
Physics and mechanics
In physical sciences and statistical mechanics, angle brackets are used to denote an average (expected value) over time or over another continuous parameter. For example:
In mathematical physics, especially quantum mechanics, it is common to write the inner product between elements as ⟨a|b⟩, as a short version of ⟨a|·|b⟩, or ⟨a|Ô|b⟩, where Ô is an operator. This is known as Dirac notation or bra–ket notation, to note vectors from the dual spaces of the Bra ⟨A| and the Ket |B⟩. But there are other notations used.
In continuum mechanics, chevrons may be used as Macaulay brackets.
Angle brackets in programming languages
In C++ chevrons (actually less-than and greater-than) are used to surround arguments to templates. They are also used to surround the names of header files; this usage was inherited from and is also found in C.
In the Z formal specification language, chevrons define a sequence.
In HTML, chevrons (actually 'greater than' and 'less than' symbols) are used to bracket meta text. For example <b>
denotes that the following text should be displayed as bold. Pairs of meta text tags are required – much as brackets themselves are usually in pairs. The end of the bold text segment would be indicated by </b>
. This use is sometimes extended as an informal mechanism for communicating mood or tone in digital formats such as messaging, for example adding "<sighs>" at the end of a sentence.
Unicode
Representations of various kinds of brackets in Unicode and their respective HTML entities, that are not in the infoboxes in preceding sections, are given below.
Uses | Unicode/HTML | Sample |
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Quine corners | U+231C ⌜ TOP LEFT CORNER (⌜, ⌜) | ⌜quasi-quotation⌝ ⌜editorial notation⌝ |
U+231D ⌝ TOP RIGHT CORNER (⌝, ⌝) | ||
U+231E ⌞ BOTTOM LEFT CORNER (⌞, ⌞) | ⌞editorial notation⌟ | |
U+231F ⌟ BOTTOM RIGHT CORNER (⌟, ⌟) | ||
Fullwidth parentheses | U+FF5F ⦅ FULLWIDTH LEFT WHITE PARENTHESIS | ⦅...⦆ |
U+FF60 ⦆ FULLWIDTH RIGHT WHITE PARENTHESIS | ||
Technical/mathematical (specialized) | U+23B8 ⎸ LEFT VERTICAL BOX LINE | ⎸boxed text⎹ |
U+23B9 ⎹ RIGHT VERTICAL BOX LINE | ||
U+23E0 ⏠ TOP TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ⏠ | |
U+23E1 ⏡ BOTTOM TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ||
U+27C5 ⟅ LEFT S-SHAPED BAG DELIMITER | ⟅...⟆ | |
U+27C6 ⟆ RIGHT S-SHAPED BAG DELIMITER | ||
U+27D3 ⟓ LOWER RIGHT CORNER WITH DOT | ⟓pullback...pushout⟔ | |
U+27D4 ⟔ UPPER LEFT CORNER WITH DOT | ||
U+27EC ⟬ MATHEMATICAL LEFT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET (⟬) | ⟬white tortoise shell brackets⟭ | |
U+27ED ⟭ MATHEMATICAL RIGHT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET (⟭) | ||
U+2987 ⦇ Z NOTATION LEFT IMAGE BRACKET | R⦇S⦈ | |
U+2988 ⦈ Z NOTATION RIGHT IMAGE BRACKET | ||
U+2989 ⦉ Z NOTATION LEFT BINDING BRACKET | ⦉x:Z⦊ | |
U+298A ⦊ Z NOTATION RIGHT BINDING BRACKET | ||
U+2993 ⦓ LEFT ARC LESS-THAN BRACKET (⦓) | ⦓inequality sign brackets⦔ | |
U+2994 ⦔ RIGHT ARC GREATER-THAN BRACKET (⦔) | ||
U+2995 ⦕ DOUBLE LEFT ARC GREATER-THAN BRACKET (⦕) | ⦕inequality sign brackets⦖ | |
U+2996 ⦖ DOUBLE RIGHT ARC LESS-THAN BRACKET (⦖) | ||
U+2997 ⦗ LEFT BLACK TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ⦗black tortoise shell brackets⦘ | |
U+2998 ⦘ RIGHT BLACK TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ||
U+29D8 ⧘ LEFT WIGGLY FENCE | ⧘...⧙ | |
U+29D9 ⧙ RIGHT WIGGLY FENCE | ||
U+29DA ⧚ LEFT DOUBLE WIGGLY FENCE | ⧚...⧛ | |
U+29DB ⧛ RIGHT DOUBLE WIGGLY FENCE | ||
Half brackets | U+2E22 ⸢ TOP LEFT HALF BRACKET | ⸢editorial notation⸣ |
U+2E23 ⸣ TOP RIGHT HALF BRACKET | ||
U+2E24 ⸤ BOTTOM LEFT HALF BRACKET | ⸤editorial notation⸥ | |
U+2E25 ⸥ BOTTOM RIGHT HALF BRACKET | ||
Compatibility variants for CNS 11643 | U+FE59 ﹙ SMALL LEFT PARENTHESIS | ﹙...﹚ |
U+FE5A ﹚ SMALL RIGHT PARENTHESIS | ||
U+FE5B ﹛ SMALL LEFT CURLY BRACKET | ﹛...﹜ | |
U+FE5C ﹜ SMALL RIGHT CURLY BRACKET | ||
U+FE5D ﹝ SMALL LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ﹝...﹞ | |
U+FE5E ﹞ SMALL RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ||
Dingbats | U+2772 ❲ LIGHT LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET ORNAMENT (❲) | ❲light tortoise shell bracket ornament❳ |
U+2773 ❳ LIGHT RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET ORNAMENT (❳) | ||
N'Ko | U+2E1C ⸜ LEFT LOW PARAPHRASE BRACKET | ⸜ߒߞߏ⸝ |
U+2E1D ⸝ RIGHT LOW PARAPHRASE BRACKET | ||
Ogham | U+169B ᚛ OGHAM FEATHER MARK | ᚛ᚑᚌᚐᚋ᚜ |
U+169C ᚜ OGHAM REVERSED FEATHER MARK | ||
Old Hungarian | U+2E42 ⹂ DOUBLE LOW-REVERSED-9 QUOTATION MARK | ⹂ |
Tibetan | U+0F3A ༺ TIBETAN MARK GUG RTAGS GYON | ༺དབུ་ཅན་༻ |
U+0F3B ༻ TIBETAN MARK GUG RTAGS GYAS | ||
U+0F3C ༼ TIBETAN MARK ANG KHANG GYON | ༼༡༢༣༽ | |
U+0F3D ༽ TIBETAN MARK ANG KHANG GYAS | ||
New Testament editorial marks | U+2E02 ⸂ LEFT SUBSTITUTION BRACKET | ⸂...⸃ |
U+2E03 ⸃ RIGHT SUBSTITUTION BRACKET | ||
U+2E04 ⸄ LEFT DOTTED SUBSTITUTION BRACKET | ⸄...⸅ | |
U+2E05 ⸅ RIGHT DOTTED SUBSTITUTION BRACKET | ||
U+2E09 ⸉ LEFT TRANSPOSITION BRACKET | ⸉...⸊ | |
U+2E0A ⸊ RIGHT TRANSPOSITION BRACKET | ||
U+2E0C ⸌ LEFT RAISED OMISSION BRACKET | ⸌...⸍ | |
U+2E0D ⸍ RIGHT RAISED OMISSION BRACKET | ||
Medieval studies | U+2E26 ⸦ LEFT SIDEWAYS U BRACKET | ⸦crux⸧ |
U+2E27 ⸧ RIGHT SIDEWAYS U BRACKET | ||
Quotation (East-Asian texts) | U+3014 〔 LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | 〔...〕 |
U+3015 〕 RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ||
U+3016 〖 LEFT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET | 〖...〗 | |
U+3017 〗 RIGHT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET | ||
U+3018 〘 LEFT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | 〘...〙 | |
U+3019 〙 RIGHT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ||
U+301D 〝 REVERSED DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK | 〝...〞 | |
U+301E 〞 DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK | ||
Quotation (halfwidth East-Asian texts) | U+FF62 「 HALFWIDTH LEFT CORNER BRACKET | 「カタカナ」 |
U+FF63 」 HALFWIDTH RIGHT CORNER BRACKET | ||
Quotation (fullwidth East-Asian texts) | U+300C 「 LEFT CORNER BRACKET | 「表題」 |
U+300D 」 RIGHT CORNER BRACKET | ||
U+300E 『 LEFT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | 『表題』 | |
U+300F 』 RIGHT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | ||
U+3010 【 LEFT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKET | 【表題】 | |
U+3011 】 RIGHT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKET | ||
Vertical bracket presentation forms | U+FE17 ︗ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET | ︗︙︙︘ |
U+FE18 ︘ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET | ||
U+FE35 ︵ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT PARENTHESIS | ︵︙︙︶ | |
U+FE36 ︶ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT PARENTHESIS | ||
U+FE37 ︷ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT CURLY BRACKET | ︷︙︙︸ | |
U+FE38 ︸ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT CURLY BRACKET | ||
U+FE39 ︹ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ︹︙︙︺ | |
U+FE3A ︺ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET | ||
U+FE3B ︻ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKET | ︻︙︙︼ | |
U+FE3C ︼ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKET | ||
U+FE3D ︽ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET | ︽︙︙︾ | |
U+FE3E ︾ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET | ||
U+FE3F ︿ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET | ︿︙︙﹀ | |
U+FE40 ﹀ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET | ||
U+FE41 ﹁ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT CORNER BRACKET | ﹁︙︙﹂ | |
U+FE42 ﹂ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT CORNER BRACKET | ||
U+FE43 ﹃ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | ﹃︙︙﹄ | |
U+FE44 ﹄ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE CORNER BRACKET | ||
U+FE47 ﹇ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT SQUARE BRACKET | ﹇︙︙﹈ | |
U+FE48 ﹈ PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET |
- This is fullwidth version of U+2033 ″ DOUBLE PRIME. In vertical texts, U+301F 〟 LOW DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK is preferred.
- These characters are not used in typical documents. Instead the respective horizontal characters are used and the character that is rendered depends on the writing direction.
- The original name of this character is "Presentation Form For Vertical Right White Lenticular Brakcet [sic]". Since Unicode character names cannot be changed, this character has the corrected name as an alias.
See also
- Bracket (mathematics)
- International variation in quotation marks
- Emoticon
- Japanese typographic symbols
- Order of operations
- Triple parentheses
References
- Pointon & Clark 2014, p. 406.
- "What Are Angle Brackets ( < ) and How do You Use Them?". 16 March 2022.
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- "Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm". Unicode Technical Reports. Unicode Consortium. § 3.1.3 Paired Brackets. Archived from the original on 3 October 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
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- Bob, Bemer. "The Great Curly Brace Trace Chase". Archived from the original on 3 September 2009. Retrieved 5 September 2009.
- Bringhurst, Robert. The Elements of Typographic Style. §5.3.2.
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- "C0 Controls and Basic Latin Code Chart" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 May 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
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- IPA Handbook p. 191
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- Parker, Charles T.; Tindall, Brian J.; Garrity, George M., eds. (2019). "International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes: Prokaryotic Code (2008 Revision)". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 69 (1A): S19. doi:10.1099/ijsem.0.000778. PMID 26596770.
- Watts 1877, pp. 140–141.
- Ihde 1984, p. 115.
- "R-0.1.5 Enclosing marks". ACDLabs.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2023. Retrieved 3 May 2023.
- "CJK Symbols and Punctuation Code Chart" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 April 2009. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
- Smith, John. The Printer's Grammar p. 84.
- The Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2003. §6.104.
- California Style Manual (4th ed.). §4:59.
- Wilson, Kenneth G. (1993). "Brackets (Square, Angle)". The Columbia Guide to Standard American English. Columbia University Press. Archived from the original on 24 May 2008 – via Bartleby.com.
- The Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2003. §6.102, §6.106.
- "How to Integrate Direct Quotations into Your Writing". Depts.Washington.edu. University of Washington. 2004. Archived from the original on 8 September 2021.
- The Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2003. §6.105.
- Christian, Darrell; Froke, Paula Marie; Jacobsen, Sally A.; Minthorn, David, eds. (2014). "brackets []". Associated Press Stylebook 2014. Chapter "Punctuation Guide" (49th ed.). New York: Associated Press. p. 289. ISBN 9780917360589. LCCN 2002249088. OCLC 881182354.
- The Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed.). University of Chicago Press. 2003. §6.107.
- Achatz & Anderson 2005, pp. 165–166.
- "Halboffenes Intervall". www.mathe-lexikon.at (in German). Retrieved 20 April 2024.
- "Intervall Mathe • alle Arten & Schreibweisen". Studyflix (in German). Retrieved 20 April 2024.
- Dowty, D., Wall, R. and Peters, S.: 1981, Introduction to Montague semantics, Springer.
- Scott, D.; Strachey, C. (1971). Toward a Mathematical Semantics for Computer Languages. Oxford University Computing Laboratory, Programming Research Group.
- "Part, Wolfram Language function". Reference.Wolfram.com. Wolfram Research. 2014 [1988]. Archived from the original on 31 March 2023.
In StandardForm and InputForm, expr[[spec]] can be input as expr〚spec〛.
- "Text Leiden+ Documentation". Papyri.info. Archived from the original on 24 February 2020. Retrieved 5 March 2020.
- GB/T 15834-2011 标点符号用法 (General rules for punctuation), 10 December 2011, 4.9.3.3, 4.9.3.5
- M.L. West (1973) Textual Criticism and Editorial Technique (Stuttgart) 81.
- Examples may be found under the corresponding entry at :sv:Parentes.
- Yeshaya, Joachim J.M.S., ed. (2010). Medieval Hebrew Poetry in Muslim Egypt: The Secular Poetry of the Karaite Poet Moses Ben Abraham Dar'i. Karaite Texts and Studies. Vol. 3. Brill. p. 6. ISBN 9789004191303.
- Hunt, Tim, ed. (1988). Textual Evidence and Commentary. The Collected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers. Vol. 5. Stanford University Press. p. 1053. ISBN 9780804738170.
- Lennard, John (2006). The Poetry Handbook (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 122. ISBN 9780191532733.
- Robertson 1785, p. 143.
- Wilson 1850, p. 165.
- Hutton 1836, p. 18.
- Hutton 1836, p. 20.
- "U+007B LEFT CURLY BRACKET". DecodeUnicode.org. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 3 May 2009.
- "Brace and Indent Styles and Code Convention". Programming with Style. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 – via Riedquat.de.
- Newham & Rosenblatt 1998, p. 14.
- Sobell & Seebach 2005, p. 323.
- Biggs 2002.
- Raymond, Eric S. "broket". The Jargon File (ver. 4.4.7 ed.). Archived from the original on 10 February 2013. Retrieved 13 February 2013 – via CatB.org.
- Peters 2007, p. 138.
- Trask, Robert Lawrence (2000). "Angle brackets". The Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics. Edinburgh University Press. p. 22. ISBN 9781579582180. Archived from the original on 31 October 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
- Bauer, Laurie (2007). "Notational conventions: Brackets". The Linguistics Student's Handbook. Edinburgh University Press. p. 99. ISBN 9780748627592. Archived from the original on 31 October 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
- Sampson, Geoffrey (2016). "Writing systems: methods for recording language". In Allan, Keith (ed.). The Routledge Handbook of Linguistics. Routledge. p. 60. ISBN 9781317513049. Archived from the original on 31 October 2023. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
- Hefferon, Jim. Linear algebra (PDF) (Third ed.). Saint Michael's College. p. 121. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 December 2020. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
- "Small Form Variants" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium.
- "Ogham Code Chart" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium. Archived (PDF) from the original on 12 August 2021. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
- "Tibetan Code Chart" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 April 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
- "CJK Compatibility Forms" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium.
- "Vertical Forms" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Unicode Consortium.
Sources
- McArthur, Thomas Burns; McArthur, Roshan (2005). "Brackets". Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192806376.
- Pointon, Graham; Clark, Stewart (2014). "Punctuation Guide". Words: A User's Guide. Routledge. ISBN 9781317864295.
- Peters, Pam (2007). The Cambridge Guide to Australian English Usage (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139465212.
- Watts, Henry (1877). "Notation". A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences. Vol. 4. Longmans, Green, and Company.
- Newham, Cameron; Rosenblatt, Bill (1998). Learning the Bash Shell. O'Reilly Media. ISBN 9781565923478.
- Sobell, Mark G.; Seebach, Peter (2005). A Practical Guide to UNIX for Mac OS X Users. Prentice Hall Professional. ISBN 9780321629982.
- Biggs, Norman (2002). "Set notation". Discrete Mathematics. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780198507178.
- Ihde, Aaron J. (1984). The Development of Modern Chemistry. Dover Books on Chemistry. Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486642352.
- Achatz, Thomas; Anderson, John G. (2005). McKenzie, Kathleen (ed.). Technical Shop Mathematics. Industrial Press. ISBN 9780831130862.
- Wilson, John (1850). Treatise on English Punctuation (2nd ed.). Boston: Published by the author.
- Robertson, Joseph (1785). An Essay on Punctuation. London: J. Walter.
- Hutton, Charles (1836). Gregory, Olinthus (ed.). A Course of Mathematics. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). London: Longman, Rees.
- Lennard, John (1991). But I Digress: The Exploitation of Parentheses in English Printed Verse. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198112475.
- Turnbull, Arthur T.; Baird, Russell N. (1964). The Graphics of Communication: Typography, Layout, Design. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. States that what are depicted as brackets above are called braces and braces are called brackets. This was the terminology in US printing prior to computers.
External links
- Media related to Brackets at Wikimedia Commons
- The dictionary definition of bracket at Wiktionary
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bracket news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message A bracket is either of two tall fore or back facing punctuation marks commonly used to isolate a segment of text or data from its surroundings They come in four main pairs of shapes as given in the box to the right which also gives their names that vary between British and American English Brackets without further qualification are in British English the marks and in American English the marks Brackets Brackets BE or parentheses AE or round brackets BE Square brackets BE or brackets AE Braces BE amp AE or curly brackets BE Angle brackets BE amp AE or chevrons Other symbols are repurposed as brackets in specialist contexts such as those used by linguists Brackets are typically deployed in symmetric pairs and an individual bracket may be identified as a left or right bracket or alternatively an opening bracket or closing bracket respectively depending on the directionality of the context In casual writing and in technical fields such as computing or linguistic analysis of grammar brackets nest with segments of bracketed material containing embedded within them other further bracketed sub segments The number of opening brackets matches the number of closing brackets in such cases Various forms of brackets are used in mathematics with specific mathematical meanings often for denoting specific mathematical functions and subformulas HistoryAngle brackets or chevrons were the earliest type of bracket to appear in written English Erasmus coined the term lunula to refer to the round brackets or parentheses recalling the shape of the crescent moon Latin luna Most typewriters only had the left and right parentheses Square brackets appeared with some teleprinters Braces curly brackets first became part of a character set with the 8 bit code of the IBM 7030 Stretch In 1961 ASCII contained parentheses square and curly brackets and also less than and greater than signs that could be used as angle brackets TypographyIn English typographers mostly prefer not to set brackets in italics even when the enclosed text is italic However in other languages like German if brackets enclose text in italics they are usually also set in italics Parentheses or round bracketsFor technical reasons redirects here For the keyboard symbols see List of emoticons For the generic smiling face see Smiley This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Parenthesis parentheses AE brackets BE round brackets BE In UnicodeGeneral purpose half width U 0028 LEFT PARENTHESIS amp lpar U 0029 RIGHT PARENTHESIS amp rpar General purpose full width East Asian U FF08 FULLWIDTH LEFT PARENTHESIS U FF09 FULLWIDTH RIGHT PARENTHESISArabic script Quranic quotations U FD3E ORNATE LEFT PARENTHESISU FD3F ORNATE RIGHT PARENTHESIS Mediaeval studies U 2E28 LEFT DOUBLE PARENTHESISU 2E29 RIGHT DOUBLE PARENTHESIS Technical U 207D SUPERSCRIPT LEFT PARENTHESISU 207E SUPERSCRIPT RIGHT PARENTHESISU 208D SUBSCRIPT LEFT PARENTHESISU 208E SUBSCRIPT RIGHT PARENTHESISU 239B LEFT PARENTHESIS UPPER HOOKU 239C LEFT PARENTHESIS EXTENSIONU 239D LEFT PARENTHESIS LOWER HOOKU 239E RIGHT PARENTHESIS UPPER HOOKU 239F RIGHT PARENTHESIS EXTENSIONU 23A0 RIGHT PARENTHESIS LOWER HOOKU 23DC TOP PARENTHESIS amp OverParenthesis U 23DD BOTTOM PARENTHESIS amp UnderParenthesis U 27EE MATHEMATICAL LEFT FLATTENED PARENTHESISU 27EF MATHEMATICAL RIGHT FLATTENED PARENTHESISU 2983 LEFT WHITE CURLY BRACKETU 2984 RIGHT WHITE CURLY BRACKETU 2985 LEFT WHITE PARENTHESIS amp lopar U 2986 RIGHT WHITE PARENTHESIS amp ropar Phonetic punctuation U 2E59 TOP HALF LEFT PARENTHESISU 2E5A TOP HALF RIGHT PARENTHESISU 2E5B BOTTOM HALF LEFT PARENTHESISU 2E5C BOTTOM HALF RIGHT PARENTHESIS Dingbats U 2768 MEDIUM LEFT PARENTHESIS ORNAMENTU 2769 MEDIUM RIGHT PARENTHESIS ORNAMENTU 276A MEDIUM FLATTENED LEFT PARENTHESIS ORNAMENTU 276B MEDIUM FLATTENED RIGHT PARENTHESIS ORNAMENTLook up parenthesis round bracket or in Wiktionary the free dictionary and are parentheses p e ˈ r ɛ n 8 ɪ s iː z singular parenthesis p e ˈ r ɛ n 8 ɪ s ɪ s in American English and either round brackets or simply brackets in British English They are also known as parens p e ˈ r ɛ n z circle brackets or smooth brackets In formal writing parentheses is also used in British English citation needed Uses of Parentheses contain adjunctive material that serves to clarify in the manner of a gloss or is aside from the main point A comma before or after the material can also be used though if the sentence contains commas for other purposes visual confusion may result A dash before and after the material is also sometimes used Parentheses may be used in formal writing to add supplementary information such as Senator John McCain R Arizona spoke at length They can also indicate shorthand for either singular or plural for nouns e g the claim s It can also be used for gender neutral language especially in languages with grammatical gender e g s he agreed with his her physician the slash in the second instance as one alternative is replacing the other not adding to it Parenthetical phrases have been used extensively in informal writing and stream of consciousness literature Examples include the southern American author William Faulkner see Absalom Absalom and the Quentin section of The Sound and the Fury as well as poet E E Cummings Parentheses have historically been used where the em dash is currently used in alternatives such as parenthesis parentheses Examples of this usage can be seen in editions of Fowler s Dictionary of Modern English Usage Parentheses may be nested generally with one set such as this inside another set This is not commonly used in formal writing though sometimes other brackets especially square brackets will be used for one or more inner set of parentheses in other words secondary or even tertiary phrases can be found within the main parenthetical sentence Language A parenthesis in rhetoric and linguistics refers to the entire bracketed text not just to the enclosing marks used so all the text in this set of round brackets may be described as a parenthesis Taking as an example the sentence Mrs Pennyfarthing What Yes that was her name was my landlady the explanatory phrase between the parentheses is itself called a parenthesis Again the parenthesis implies that the meaning and flow of the bracketed phrase is supplemental to the rest of the text and the whole would be unchanged were the parenthesized sentences removed The term refers to the syntax rather than the enclosure method the same clause in the form Mrs Pennyfarthing What Yes that was her name was my landlady is also a parenthesis In non specialist usage the term parenthetical phrase is more widely understood In phonetics parentheses are used for indistinguishable or unidentified utterances They are also seen for silent articulation mouthing where the expected phonetic transcription is derived from lip reading and with periods to indicate silent pauses for example or 2 sec Enumerations An unpaired right parenthesis is often used as part of a label in an ordered list such as this one a educational testing b technical writing and diagrams c market research and d elections Accounting Traditionally in accounting contra amounts are placed in parentheses A debit balance account in a series of credit balances will have parenthesis and vice versa Parentheses in mathematics Parentheses are used in mathematical notation to indicate grouping often inducing a different order of operations For example in the usual order of algebraic operations 4 3 2 equals 14 since the multiplication is done before the addition However 4 3 2 equals 20 because the parentheses override normal precedence causing the addition to be done first Some authors follow the convention in mathematical equations that when parentheses have one level of nesting the inner pair are parentheses and the outer pair are square brackets Example 4 3 2 2 400 displaystyle 4 times 3 2 2 400 Parentheses in programming languages Parentheses are included in the syntaxes of many programming languages Typically needed to denote an argument to tell the compiler what data type the Method Function needs to look for first in order to initialise In some cases such as in LISP parentheses are a fundamental construct of the language They are also often used for scoping functions and operators and for arrays In syntax diagrams they are used for grouping such as in extended Backus Naur form In Mathematica and the Wolfram language parentheses are used to indicate grouping for example with pure anonymous functions Taxonomy If it is desired to include the subgenus when giving the scientific name of an animal species or subspecies the subgenus s name is provided in parentheses between the genus name and the specific epithet For instance Polyphylla Xerasiobia alba is a way to cite the species Polyphylla alba while also mentioning that it is in the subgenus Xerasiobia There is also a convention of citing a subgenus by enclosing it in parentheses after its genus e g Polyphylla Xerasiobia is a way to refer to the subgenus Xerasiobia within the genus Polyphylla Parentheses are similarly used to cite a subgenus with the name of a prokaryotic species although the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes ICNP requires the use of the abbreviation subgen as well e g Acetobacter subgen Gluconoacetobacter liquefaciens Chemistry Parentheses are used in chemistry to denote a repeated substructure within a molecule e g HC CH3 3 isobutane or similarly to indicate the stoichiometry of ionic compounds with such substructures e g Ca NO3 2 calcium nitrate This is a notation that was pioneered by Berzelius who wanted chemical formulae to more resemble algebraic notation with brackets enclosing groups that could be multiplied e g in 3 AlO2 2SO3 the 3 multiplies everything within the parentheses In chemical nomenclature parentheses are used to distinguish structural features and multipliers for clarity for example in the polymer poly methyl methacrylate Square bracketsSquare brackets In UnicodeGeneral purpose half width U 005B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET amp lbrack amp lsqb U 005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET amp rbrack amp rsqb General purpose full width East Asian U FF3B FULLWIDTH LEFT SQUARE BRACKET U FF3D FULLWIDTH RIGHT SQUARE BRACKETMediaeval studies U 2045 LEFT SQUARE BRACKET WITH QUILLU 2046 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET WITH QUILL Technical Mathematical U 23A1 LEFT SQUARE BRACKET UPPER CORNERU 23A2 LEFT SQUARE BRACKET EXTENSIONU 23A3 LEFT SQUARE BRACKET LOWER CORNERU 23A4 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET UPPER CORNERU 23A5 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET EXTENSIONU 23A6 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET LOWER CORNERU 23B4 TOP SQUARE BRACKET amp OverBracket amp tbrk U 23B5 BOTTOM SQUARE BRACKET amp bbrk amp UnderBracket U 23B6 BOTTOM SQUARE BRACKET OVER TOP SQUARE BRACKET amp bbrktbrk U 27E6 MATHEMATICAL LEFT WHITE SQUARE BRACKET amp LeftDoubleBracket amp lobrk U 27E7 MATHEMATICAL RIGHT WHITE SQUARE BRACKET amp RightDoubleBracket amp robrk U 298B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET WITH UNDERBAR amp lbrke U 298C RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET WITH UNDERBAR amp rbrke U 298D LEFT SQUARE BRACKET WITH TICK IN TOP CORNER amp lbrkslu U 2990 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET WITH TICK IN TOP CORNER amp rbrkslu U 298E RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET WITH TICK IN BOTTOM CORNER amp rbrksld U 298F LEFT SQUARE BRACKET WITH TICK IN BOTTOM CORNER amp lbrksld Phonetic punctuation U 2E55 LEFT SQUARE BRACKET WITH STROKEU 2E56 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET WITH STROKEU 2E57 LEFT SQUARE BRACKET WITH DOUBLE STROKEU 2E58 RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET WITH DOUBLE STROKE Quotation East Asian texts U 301A LEFT WHITE SQUARE BRACKETU 301B RIGHT WHITE SQUARE BRACKETLook up square bracket or crotchet in Wiktionary the free dictionary and are square brackets in both British and American English but are also more simply brackets in the latter An older name for these brackets is crotchets Uses of Square brackets are often used to insert explanatory material or to mark where a word or passage was omitted from an original material by someone other than the original author or to mark modifications in quotations In transcribed interviews sounds responses and reactions that are not words but that can be described are set off in square brackets laughs When quoted material is in any way altered the alterations are enclosed in square brackets within the quotation to show that the quotation is not exactly as given or to add an annotation For example The Plaintiff asserted his cause is just stating m y causes is sic just In the original quoted sentence the word my was capitalized it has been modified in the quotation given and the change signalled with brackets Similarly where the quotation contained a grammatical error is are the quoting author signalled that the error was in the original with sic Latin for thus A bracketed ellipsis is often used to indicate omitted material I d like to thank several unimportant people for their tolerance Bracketed comments inserted into a quote indicate where the original has been modified for clarity I appreciate it the honor but I must refuse and the future of psionics see definition is in doubt Or one can quote the original statement I hate to do laundry with a sometimes grammatical modification inserted He hate s to do laundry Additionally a small letter can be replaced by a capital one when the beginning of the original printed text is being quoted in another piece of text or when the original text has been omitted for succinctness for example when referring to a verbose original To the extent that policymakers and elite opinion in general have made use of economic analysis at all they have as the saying goes done so the way a drunkard uses a lamppost for support not illumination can be quoted succinctly as P olicymakers have made use of economic analysis the way a drunkard uses a lamppost for support not illumination When nested parentheses are needed brackets are sometimes used as a substitute for the inner pair of parentheses within the outer pair When deeper levels of nesting are needed convention is to alternate between parentheses and brackets at each level Alternatively empty square brackets can also indicate omitted material usually single letter only The original Reading is also a process and it also changes you can be rewritten in a quote as It has been suggested that reading can also change you In translated works brackets are used to signify the same word or phrase in the original language to avoid ambiguity For example He is trained in the way of the open hand karate Style and usage guides originating in the news industry of the twentieth century such as the AP Stylebook recommend against the use of square brackets because They cannot be transmitted over news wires However this guidance has little relevance outside of the technological constraints of the industry and era In linguistics phonetic transcriptions are generally enclosed within square brackets whereas phonemic transcriptions typically use paired slashes according to International Phonetic Alphabet rules Pipes are often used to indicate a morphophonemic rather than phonemic representation Other conventions are double slashes double pipes and curly brackets In lexicography square brackets usually surround the section of a dictionary entry which contains the etymology of the word the entry defines Proofreading Brackets called move left symbols or move right symbols are added to the sides of text in proofreading to indicate changes in indentation Move left To Fate I sue of other means bereft the only refuge for the wretched left Center Paradise Lost Move up Square brackets are used to denote parts of the text that need to be checked when preparing drafts prior to finalizing a document Law Square brackets are used in some countries in the citation of law reports to identify parallel citations to non official reporters For example Chronicle Pub Co v Superior Court 1998 54 Cal 2d 548 7 Cal Rptr 109 In some other countries such as England and Wales square brackets are used to indicate that the year is part of the citation and parentheses are used to indicate the year the judgment was given For example National Coal Board v England 1954 AC 403 This case is in the 1954 volume of the Appeal Cases reports although the decision may have been given in 1953 or earlier Compare with 1954 98 Sol Jo 176 This citation reports a decision from 1954 in volume 98 of the Solicitors Journal which may be published in 1955 or later They often denote points that have not yet been agreed to in legal drafts and the year in which a report was made for certain case law decisions Square brackets in mathematics Brackets are used in mathematics in a variety of notations including standard notations for commutators the floor function the Lie bracket equivalence classes the Iverson bracket and matrices Square brackets may be used exclusively or in combination with parentheses to represent intervals as interval notation For example 0 5 represents the set of real numbers from 0 to 5 inclusive Both parentheses and brackets are used to denote a half open interval 5 12 would be the set of all real numbers between 5 and 12 including 5 but not 12 The numbers may come as close as they like to 12 including 11 999 and so forth but 12 0 is not included In some European countries the notation 5 12 is also used The endpoint adjoining the square bracket is known as closed whereas the endpoint adjoining the parenthesis is known as open In group theory and ring theory brackets denote the commutator In group theory the commutator g h is commonly defined as g 1 h 1 g h In ring theory the commutator a b is defined as a b b a Chemistry Square brackets can also be used in chemistry to represent the concentration of a chemical substance in solution and to denote charge a Lewis structure of an ion particularly distributed charge in a complex ion repeating chemical units particularly in polymers and transition state structures among other uses Square brackets in programming languages Brackets are used in many computer programming languages primarily for array indexing But they are also used to denote general tuples sets and other structures just as in mathematics There may be several other uses as well depending on the language at hand In syntax diagrams they are used for optional portions such as in extended Backus Naur form Double brackets Double brackets or white square brackets or Scott brackets are used to indicate the semantic evaluation function in formal semantics for natural language and denotational semantics for programming languages In the Wolfram Language double brackets either as iterated single brackets or ligatures are used for list indexing The brackets stand for a function that maps a linguistic expression to its denotation or semantic value In mathematics double brackets may also be used to denote intervals of integers or less often the floor function In papyrology following the Leiden Conventions they are used to enclose text that has been deleted in antiquity Lenticular brackets Look up in Wiktionary the free dictionary Some East Asian languages use lenticular brackets a combination of square brackets and round brackets called 方頭括號 fangtou kuohao in Chinese and 隅付き括弧 sumitsuki kakko in Japanese They are used in titles and headings in both Chinese and Japanese On the Internet they are used to emphasize a text In Japanese they are most frequently seen in dictionaries for quoting Chinese characters and Sino Japanese loanwords Floor and ceiling corner brackets Floor and ceiling ceiling floor In UnicodeFloor and ceiling functions U 2308 LEFT CEILING amp lceil amp LeftCeiling U 2309 RIGHT CEILING amp rceil amp RightCeiling U 230A LEFT FLOOR amp LeftFloor amp lfloor U 230B RIGHT FLOOR amp rfloor amp RightFloor Look up or in Wiktionary the free dictionary The floor corner brackets and the ceiling corner brackets and U 2308 U 2309 are used to denote the integer floor and ceiling functions Quine corners and half brackets or The Quine corners and have at least two uses in mathematical logic either as quasi quotation a generalization of quotation marks or to denote the Godel number of the enclosed expression Half brackets are used in English to mark added text such as in translations Bill saw her In editions of papyrological texts half brackets and or and enclose text which is lacking in the papyrus due to damage but can be restored by virtue of another source such as an ancient quotation of the text transmitted by the papyrus For example Callimachus Iambus 1 2 reads ἐk tῶn ὅkoy boῦn kolly boy p iprhskoysin A hole in the papyrus has obliterated boy p but these letters are supplied by an ancient commentary on the poem Second intermittent sources can be between and Quine corners are sometimes used instead of half brackets Brackets with quills Known as spike parentheses Swedish piggparenteser and are used in Swedish bilingual dictionaries to enclose supplemental constructions Curly bracketsCurly brackets In UnicodeGeneral half width U 007B LEFT CURLY BRACKET amp lbrace amp lcub U 007D RIGHT CURLY BRACKET amp rbrace amp rcub General full width East Asian U FF5B FULLWIDTH LEFT CURLY BRACKET U FF5D FULLWIDTH RIGHT CURLY BRACKETTechnical Mathematical half width U 23A7 LEFT CURLY BRACKET UPPER HOOKU 23A8 LEFT CURLY BRACKET MIDDLE PIECEU 23A9 LEFT CURLY BRACKET LOWER HOOKU 23AB RIGHT CURLY BRACKET UPPER HOOKU 23AC RIGHT CURLY BRACKET MIDDLE PIECEU 23AD RIGHT CURLY BRACKET LOWER HOOKU 23AA CURLY BRACKET EXTENSIONU 23B0 UPPER LEFT OR LOWER RIGHT CURLY BRACKET SECTION amp lmoust amp lmoustache U 23B1 UPPER RIGHT OR LOWER LEFT CURLY BRACKET SECTION amp rmoust amp rmoustache U 23DE TOP CURLY BRACKET amp OverBrace U 23DF BOTTOM CURLY BRACKET amp UnderBrace Dingbats U 2774 MEDIUM LEFT CURLY BRACKET ORNAMENTU 2775 MEDIUM RIGHT CURLY BRACKET ORNAMENT and are curly brackets or braces in both American and British English Uses of An example of curly brackets used to group sentences together Curly brackets are used by text editors to mark editorial insertions or interpolations Braces used to be used to connect multiple lines of poetry such as triplets in a poem of rhyming couplets although this usage had gone out of fashion by the 19th century Another older use in prose was to eliminate duplication in lists and tables Two examples here from Charles Hutton s 19th century table of weights and measures in his A Course of Mathematics In this kingdom The standard of Length is a Yard Surface is a Square Yard the 1 4840 of an Acre Solidity is a Cubic Yard Capacity is a Gallon Weight is a Pound Imperial measure of CAPACITY for coals culm lime fish potatoes fruit and other goods commonly sold by heaped measure 2 Gallons 1 Peck 764 Cubic Inches nearly8 Gallons 1 Bushel 2813 1 2 3 Bushels 1 Sack 4 8 9 Cubic Feet nearly12 Sacks 1 Chald 58 2 3 As an extension to the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA braces are used for prosodic notation Music In music they are known as accolades or braces and connect two or more lines staves of music that are played simultaneously Chemistry The use of braces in chemistry is an old notation that has long since been superseded by subscripted numbers The chemical formula for water H2O was represented as HH O displaystyle left H atop H right O Curly brackets in programming languages In many programming languages curly brackets enclose groups of statements and create a local scope Such languages C C C and many others are therefore called curly bracket languages They are also used to define structures and enumerated type in these languages In various Unix shells they enclose a group of strings that are used in a process known as brace expansion where each successive string in the group is interpolated at that point in the command line to generate the command line s final form The mechanism originated in the C shell and the string generation mechanism is a simple interpolation that can occur anywhere in a command line and takes no account of existing filenames In syntax diagrams they are used for repetition such as in extended Backus Naur form In the Z formal specification language braces define a set Curly brackets in mathematics In mathematics they delimit sets in what is called set notation Braces enclose either a literal list of set elements or a rule that defines the set elements For example S a b defines a set S containing a and b S x x gt 0 defines a set S containing elements implied to be numbers x 0 x 1 and so on where every x n satisfies the rule that it is greater than zero They are often also used to denote the Poisson bracket between two quantities In ring theory braces denote the anticommutator where a b is defined as a b b a Look up curly bracket brace squiggly or accolade in Wiktionary the free dictionary Angle bracketsThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Angle brackets lt gt Angle brackets BE amp AE Angle brackets BE amp AE less than and greater thanIn UnicodeLess greater than half width U 003C lt LESS THAN SIGN amp lt amp LT U 003E gt GREATER THAN SIGN amp gt amp GT Less greater than full width East Asian U FF1C FULLWIDTH LESS THAN SIGN U FF1E FULLWIDTH GREATER THAN SIGNTechnical Mathematical half width U 2329 LEFT POINTING ANGLE BRACKETU 232A RIGHT POINTING ANGLE BRACKETU 27E8 MATHEMATICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET amp lang amp langle amp LeftAngleBracket U 27E9 MATHEMATICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET amp rang amp rangle amp RightAngleBracket U 27EA MATHEMATICAL LEFT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET amp Lang U 27EB MATHEMATICAL RIGHT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET amp Rang U 2991 LEFT ANGLE BRACKET WITH DOT amp langd U 2992 RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET WITH DOT amp rangd U 29FC LEFT POINTING CURVED ANGLE BRACKETU 29FD RIGHT POINTING CURVED ANGLE BRACKET Quotation fullwidth East Asian texts U 3008 LEFT ANGLE BRACKETU 3009 RIGHT ANGLE BRACKETU 300A LEFT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKETU 300B RIGHT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET Dingbats U 276C MEDIUM LEFT POINTING ANGLE BRACKET ORNAMENTU 276D MEDIUM RIGHT POINTING ANGLE BRACKET ORNAMENTU 2770 HEAVY LEFT POINTING ANGLE BRACKET ORNAMENTU 2771 HEAVY RIGHT POINTING ANGLE BRACKET ORNAMENTU 276E HEAVY LEFT POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENTU 276F HEAVY RIGHT POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK ORNAMENT The symbols and are angle brackets in both American and British English In largely archaic computer slang they were sometimes known as brokets Strictly speaking they are distinct from V shaped chevrons as they have where the typography permits it a broader span than chevrons although when printed often no visual distinction is made The ASCII less than and greater than characters lt and gt are often used for angle brackets In many cases only those characters are accepted by computer programs and the Unicode angle brackets are not recognized for instance in HTML tags The characters for single guillemets and are also often used and sometimes normal guillemets and when nested angle brackets are needed The angle brackets or chevrons U 27E8 MATHEMATICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET and U 27E9 MATHEMATICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET are for mathematical use and Western languages whereas U 3008 LEFT ANGLE BRACKET and U 3009 RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET are for East Asian languages The chevrons at U 2329 and U 232A are deprecated in favour of the U 3008 and U 3009 East Asian angle brackets Unicode discourages their use for mathematics and in Western texts because they are canonically equivalent to the CJK code points U 300n and thus likely to render as double width symbols The less than and greater than symbols are often used as replacements for chevrons amp lang and amp rang were tied to the deprecated symbols U 2329 and U 232A in HTML4 and MathML2 but are being migrated to U 27E8 and U 27E9 for HTML5 and MathML3 as defined in XML Entity Definitions for Characters Archived 27 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Shape Angle brackets are larger than less than and greater than signs which in turn are larger than guillemets Angle brackets less than greater than signs and single guillemets in fonts Cambria DejaVu Serif Mega Corpus Andika and Everson Mono Uses of Angle brackets are infrequently used to denote words that are thought instead of spoken such as What an unusual flower In textual criticism and hence in many editions of pre modern works chevrons denote sections of the text which are illegible or otherwise lost the editor will often insert their own reconstruction where possible within them In comic books chevrons are often used to mark dialogue that has been translated notionally from another language in other words if a character is speaking another language instead of writing in the other language and providing a translation one writes the translated text within chevrons Since no foreign language is actually written this is only notionally translated citation needed In linguistics angle brackets identify graphemes e g letters of an alphabet or orthography as in The English word kaet is spelled cat See IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters In epigraphy they may be used for mechanical transliterations of a text into the Latin script In East Asian punctuation angle brackets are used as quotation marks Chevron like symbols are part of standard Chinese Japanese and less frequently Korean punctuation where they generally enclose the titles of books as or for traditional vertical printing written in vertical lines and as or for horizontal printing in horizontal Angle brackets in mathematics Angle brackets or chevrons are used in group theory to write group presentations and to denote the subgroup generated by a collection of elements In set theory chevrons or parentheses are used to denote ordered pairs and other tuples whereas curly brackets are used for unordered sets Physics and mechanics In physical sciences and statistical mechanics angle brackets are used to denote an average expected value over time or over another continuous parameter For example V t 2 limT 1T T2T2V t 2dt displaystyle left langle V t 2 right rangle lim T to infty frac 1 T int frac T 2 frac T 2 V t 2 rm d t In mathematical physics especially quantum mechanics it is common to write the inner product between elements as a b as a short version of a b or a O b where O is an operator This is known as Dirac notation or bra ket notation to note vectors from the dual spaces of the Bra A and the Ket B But there are other notations used In continuum mechanics chevrons may be used as Macaulay brackets Angle brackets in programming languages In C chevrons actually less than and greater than are used to surround arguments to templates They are also used to surround the names of header files this usage was inherited from and is also found in C In the Z formal specification language chevrons define a sequence In HTML chevrons actually greater than and less than symbols are used to bracket meta text For example lt b gt denotes that the following text should be displayed as bold Pairs of meta text tags are required much as brackets themselves are usually in pairs The end of the bold text segment would be indicated by lt b gt This use is sometimes extended as an informal mechanism for communicating mood or tone in digital formats such as messaging for example adding lt sighs gt at the end of a sentence Look up angle bracket lt gt broket pointy bracket or diamond bracket in Wiktionary the free dictionary UnicodeRepresentations of various kinds of brackets in Unicode and their respective HTML entities that are not in the infoboxes in preceding sections are given below Unicode and HTML encodings for various bracket characters Uses Unicode HTML SampleQuine corners U 231C TOP LEFT CORNER amp ulcorn amp ulcorner quasi quotation editorial notation U 231D TOP RIGHT CORNER amp urcorn amp urcorner U 231E BOTTOM LEFT CORNER amp dlcorn amp llcorner editorial notation U 231F BOTTOM RIGHT CORNER amp drcorn amp lrcorner Fullwidth parentheses U FF5F FULLWIDTH LEFT WHITE PARENTHESIS U FF60 FULLWIDTH RIGHT WHITE PARENTHESISTechnical mathematical specialized U 23B8 LEFT VERTICAL BOX LINE boxed text U 23B9 RIGHT VERTICAL BOX LINEU 23E0 TOP TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET tortoise shell brackets U 23E1 BOTTOM TORTOISE SHELL BRACKETU 27C5 LEFT S SHAPED BAG DELIMITER U 27C6 RIGHT S SHAPED BAG DELIMITERU 27D3 LOWER RIGHT CORNER WITH DOT pullback pushout U 27D4 UPPER LEFT CORNER WITH DOTU 27EC MATHEMATICAL LEFT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET amp loang white tortoise shell brackets U 27ED MATHEMATICAL RIGHT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET amp roang U 2987 Z NOTATION LEFT IMAGE BRACKET R S U 2988 Z NOTATION RIGHT IMAGE BRACKETU 2989 Z NOTATION LEFT BINDING BRACKET x Z U 298A Z NOTATION RIGHT BINDING BRACKETU 2993 LEFT ARC LESS THAN BRACKET amp lparlt inequality sign brackets U 2994 RIGHT ARC GREATER THAN BRACKET amp rpargt U 2995 DOUBLE LEFT ARC GREATER THAN BRACKET amp gtlPar inequality sign brackets U 2996 DOUBLE RIGHT ARC LESS THAN BRACKET amp ltrPar U 2997 LEFT BLACK TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET black tortoise shell brackets U 2998 RIGHT BLACK TORTOISE SHELL BRACKETU 29D8 LEFT WIGGLY FENCE U 29D9 RIGHT WIGGLY FENCEU 29DA LEFT DOUBLE WIGGLY FENCE U 29DB RIGHT DOUBLE WIGGLY FENCEHalf brackets U 2E22 TOP LEFT HALF BRACKET editorial notation U 2E23 TOP RIGHT HALF BRACKETU 2E24 BOTTOM LEFT HALF BRACKET editorial notation U 2E25 BOTTOM RIGHT HALF BRACKETCompatibility variants for CNS 11643 U FE59 SMALL LEFT PARENTHESIS U FE5A SMALL RIGHT PARENTHESISU FE5B SMALL LEFT CURLY BRACKET U FE5C SMALL RIGHT CURLY BRACKETU FE5D SMALL LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET U FE5E SMALL RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKETDingbats U 2772 LIGHT LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET ORNAMENT amp lbbrk light tortoise shell bracket ornament U 2773 LIGHT RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET ORNAMENT amp rbbrk N Ko U 2E1C LEFT LOW PARAPHRASE BRACKET ߒߞߏ U 2E1D RIGHT LOW PARAPHRASE BRACKETOgham U 169B OGHAM FEATHER MARK ᚑᚌᚐᚋ U 169C OGHAM REVERSED FEATHER MARKOld Hungarian U 2E42 DOUBLE LOW REVERSED 9 QUOTATION MARK Tibetan U 0F3A TIBETAN MARK GUG RTAGS GYON དབ ཅན U 0F3B TIBETAN MARK GUG RTAGS GYASU 0F3C TIBETAN MARK ANG KHANG GYON ༡༢༣ U 0F3D TIBETAN MARK ANG KHANG GYASNew Testament editorial marks U 2E02 LEFT SUBSTITUTION BRACKET U 2E03 RIGHT SUBSTITUTION BRACKETU 2E04 LEFT DOTTED SUBSTITUTION BRACKET U 2E05 RIGHT DOTTED SUBSTITUTION BRACKETU 2E09 LEFT TRANSPOSITION BRACKET U 2E0A RIGHT TRANSPOSITION BRACKETU 2E0C LEFT RAISED OMISSION BRACKET U 2E0D RIGHT RAISED OMISSION BRACKETMedieval studies U 2E26 LEFT SIDEWAYS U BRACKET crux U 2E27 RIGHT SIDEWAYS U BRACKETQuotation East Asian texts U 3014 LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET U 3015 RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKETU 3016 LEFT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET U 3017 RIGHT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKETU 3018 LEFT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET U 3019 RIGHT WHITE TORTOISE SHELL BRACKETU 301D REVERSED DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK U 301E DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARKQuotation halfwidth East Asian texts U FF62 HALFWIDTH LEFT CORNER BRACKET カタカナ U FF63 HALFWIDTH RIGHT CORNER BRACKETQuotation fullwidth East Asian texts U 300C LEFT CORNER BRACKET 表題 U 300D RIGHT CORNER BRACKETU 300E LEFT WHITE CORNER BRACKET 表題 U 300F RIGHT WHITE CORNER BRACKETU 3010 LEFT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKET 表題 U 3011 RIGHT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKETVertical bracket presentation forms U FE17 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKET U FE18 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE LENTICULAR BRACKETU FE35 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT PARENTHESIS U FE36 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT PARENTHESISU FE37 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT CURLY BRACKET U FE38 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT CURLY BRACKETU FE39 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKET U FE3A PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT TORTOISE SHELL BRACKETU FE3B PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKET U FE3C PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT BLACK LENTICULAR BRACKETU FE3D PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKET U FE3E PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT DOUBLE ANGLE BRACKETU FE3F PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT ANGLE BRACKET U FE40 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT ANGLE BRACKETU FE41 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT CORNER BRACKET U FE42 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT CORNER BRACKETU FE43 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT WHITE CORNER BRACKET U FE44 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT WHITE CORNER BRACKETU FE47 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL LEFT SQUARE BRACKET U FE48 PRESENTATION FORM FOR VERTICAL RIGHT SQUARE BRACKETThis is fullwidth version of U 2033 DOUBLE PRIME In vertical texts U 301F LOW DOUBLE PRIME QUOTATION MARK is preferred These characters are not used in typical documents Instead the respective horizontal characters are used and the character that is rendered depends on the writing direction The original name of this character is Presentation Form For Vertical Right White Lenticular Brakcet sic Since Unicode character names cannot be changed this character has the corrected name as an alias See alsoBracket mathematics International variation in quotation marks Emoticon Japanese typographic symbols Order of operations Triple parenthesesReferencesPointon amp Clark 2014 p 406 What Are Angle Brackets lt and How do You Use Them 16 March 2022 McArthur amp McArthur 2005 Peters 2007 p 101 Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm Unicode Technical Reports Unicode Consortium 3 1 3 Paired Brackets Archived from the original on 3 October 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Truss Lynne 2003 Eats Shoots amp Leaves p 161 ISBN 1592400876 Bob Bemer The Great Curly Brace Trace Chase Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Retrieved 5 September 2009 Bringhurst Robert The Elements of Typographic Style 5 3 2 Forsmann Friedrich DeJong Ralf 2004 Detailtypografie Detail Typography in German Mainz Herrmann Schmidt p 263 ISBN 9783874396424 C0 Controls and Basic Latin Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 26 May 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2016 Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 22 February 2016 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Arabic Presentation Forms A Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 28 April 2014 Retrieved 7 February 2016 General Punctuation Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF 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October 2022 Retrieved 19 November 2022 Dingbats Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 17 April 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Straus Jane Kaufman Lester Parentheses Punctuation Rules The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation Jossey Bass Archived from the original on 19 April 2014 Retrieved 18 April 2014 Aarts Bas 2014 Parenthesis The Oxford Dictionary of English Grammar 2 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 191 74444 0 Matthews P H 2014 Parenthesis The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Linguistics 3 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 191 75306 0 parenthetical The Free Online Dictionary Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2013 IPA Handbook p 175 IPA Handbook p 191 Names of subgenera International Code of Zoological Nomenclature 4th ed International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 2012 Archived from the original on 7 June 2021 Retrieved 6 June 2021 Welter Schultes Francisco W March 2013 1 4 5 4 Species Guidelines for the Capture and Management of Digital Zoological Names Information Copenhagen Global Biodiversity Information Facility pp 14 15 ISBN 9788792020444 Welter Schultes Francisco W March 2013 1 4 5 3 Genera Guidelines for the Capture and Management of Digital Zoological Names Information Copenhagen Global Biodiversity Information Facility p 14 ISBN 9788792020444 Parker Charles T Tindall Brian J Garrity George M eds 2019 International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes Prokaryotic Code 2008 Revision International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 69 1A S19 doi 10 1099 ijsem 0 000778 PMID 26596770 Watts 1877 pp 140 141 Ihde 1984 p 115 R 0 1 5 Enclosing marks ACDLabs com Archived from the original on 3 May 2023 Retrieved 3 May 2023 CJK Symbols and Punctuation Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 7 April 2009 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Smith John The Printer s Grammar p 84 The Chicago Manual of Style 15th ed University of Chicago Press 2003 6 104 California Style Manual 4th ed 4 59 Wilson Kenneth G 1993 Brackets Square Angle The Columbia Guide to Standard American English Columbia University Press Archived from the original on 24 May 2008 via Bartleby com The Chicago Manual of Style 15th ed University of Chicago Press 2003 6 102 6 106 How to Integrate Direct Quotations into Your Writing Depts Washington edu University of Washington 2004 Archived from the original on 8 September 2021 The Chicago Manual of Style 15th ed University of Chicago Press 2003 6 105 Christian Darrell Froke Paula Marie Jacobsen Sally A Minthorn David eds 2014 brackets Associated Press Stylebook 2014 Chapter Punctuation Guide 49th ed New York Associated Press p 289 ISBN 9780917360589 LCCN 2002249088 OCLC 881182354 The Chicago Manual of Style 15th ed University of Chicago Press 2003 6 107 Achatz amp Anderson 2005 pp 165 166 Halboffenes Intervall www mathe lexikon at in German Retrieved 20 April 2024 Intervall Mathe alle Arten amp Schreibweisen Studyflix in German Retrieved 20 April 2024 Dowty D Wall R and Peters S 1981 Introduction to Montague semantics Springer Scott D Strachey C 1971 Toward a Mathematical Semantics for Computer Languages Oxford University Computing Laboratory Programming Research Group Part Wolfram Language function Reference Wolfram com Wolfram Research 2014 1988 Archived from the original on 31 March 2023 In StandardForm and InputForm expr spec can be input as expr spec Text Leiden Documentation Papyri info Archived from the original on 24 February 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 GB T 15834 2011 标点符号用法 General rules for punctuation 10 December 2011 4 9 3 3 4 9 3 5 M L West 1973 Textual Criticism and Editorial Technique Stuttgart 81 Examples may be found under the corresponding entry at sv Parentes Yeshaya Joachim J M S ed 2010 Medieval Hebrew Poetry in Muslim Egypt The Secular Poetry of the Karaite Poet Moses Ben Abraham Dar i Karaite Texts and Studies Vol 3 Brill p 6 ISBN 9789004191303 Hunt Tim ed 1988 Textual Evidence and Commentary The Collected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers Vol 5 Stanford University Press p 1053 ISBN 9780804738170 Lennard John 2006 The Poetry Handbook 2 ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 122 ISBN 9780191532733 Robertson 1785 p 143 Wilson 1850 p 165 Hutton 1836 p 18 Hutton 1836 p 20 U 007B LEFT CURLY BRACKET DecodeUnicode org Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 3 May 2009 Brace and Indent Styles and Code Convention Programming with Style Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 via Riedquat de Newham amp Rosenblatt 1998 p 14 Sobell amp Seebach 2005 p 323 Biggs 2002 Raymond Eric S broket The Jargon File ver 4 4 7 ed Archived from the original on 10 February 2013 Retrieved 13 February 2013 via CatB org Peters 2007 p 138 Trask Robert Lawrence 2000 Angle brackets The Dictionary of Historical and Comparative Linguistics Edinburgh University Press p 22 ISBN 9781579582180 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 8 August 2015 Bauer Laurie 2007 Notational conventions Brackets The Linguistics Student s Handbook Edinburgh University Press p 99 ISBN 9780748627592 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 8 August 2015 Sampson Geoffrey 2016 Writing systems methods for recording language In Allan Keith ed The Routledge Handbook of Linguistics Routledge p 60 ISBN 9781317513049 Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 8 August 2015 Hefferon Jim Linear algebra PDF Third ed Saint Michael s College p 121 Archived PDF from the original on 3 December 2020 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Small Form Variants PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Ogham Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 12 August 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Tibetan Code Chart PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Archived PDF from the original on 13 April 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2016 CJK Compatibility Forms PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Vertical Forms PDF The Unicode Standard Unicode Consortium Sources McArthur Thomas Burns McArthur Roshan 2005 Brackets Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192806376 Pointon Graham Clark Stewart 2014 Punctuation Guide Words A User s Guide Routledge ISBN 9781317864295 Peters Pam 2007 The Cambridge Guide to Australian English Usage 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139465212 Watts Henry 1877 Notation A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences Vol 4 Longmans Green and Company Newham Cameron Rosenblatt Bill 1998 Learning the Bash Shell O Reilly Media ISBN 9781565923478 Sobell Mark G Seebach Peter 2005 A Practical Guide to UNIX for Mac OS X Users Prentice Hall Professional ISBN 9780321629982 Biggs Norman 2002 Set notation Discrete Mathematics OUP Oxford ISBN 9780198507178 Ihde Aaron J 1984 The Development of Modern Chemistry Dover Books on Chemistry Courier Corporation ISBN 9780486642352 Achatz Thomas Anderson John G 2005 McKenzie Kathleen ed Technical Shop Mathematics Industrial Press ISBN 9780831130862 Wilson John 1850 Treatise on English Punctuation 2nd ed Boston Published by the author Robertson Joseph 1785 An Essay on Punctuation London J Walter Hutton Charles 1836 Gregory Olinthus ed A Course of Mathematics Vol 1 11th ed London Longman Rees Lennard John 1991 But I Digress The Exploitation of Parentheses in English Printed Verse Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0198112475 Turnbull Arthur T Baird Russell N 1964 The Graphics of Communication Typography Layout Design New York Holt Rinehart and Winston States that what are depicted as brackets above are called braces and braces are called brackets This was the terminology in US printing prior to computers External linksMedia related to Brackets at Wikimedia Commons The dictionary definition of bracket at Wiktionary