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} U+007D, }
RIGHT CURLY BRACKET
|
[U+007C]
Basic Latin ~
[U+007E]
See also: { and { }

Translingual

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Punctuation mark

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}

  1. Used to add a comment to the right of and encompassing one or more lines, or to indicate that items to the left are subdivisions of the item on the right. Compare {.
    A ⎫
    B ⎬ these are a few letters of the alphabet
    C ⎭
    • Joseph Emerson Worcester, A Dictionary of the English Language, volume 1:
      † AT'TRY,      ⎫ a. [A.S. atter, poison.] Poison-
      † AT'TER-LY, ⎭ ous; virulent.            Chaucer.
  2. Used to indicate that two or three lines of a poem form a doublet or triplet.
  3. Used in { }.

Usage notes

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This symbol is also called a "right brace".

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See also

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References

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  • Thomas F. Adams, Typographia; Or, The Printer's Instructor: A Brief Sketch: Braces stand before, and keep together, such articles as are of the same import, and are sub-divisions of the preceding articles. They sometimes stand after, and keep together, such articles as make above one line, and have [...] posts after them, which are justified to answer to the middle of the brace. The bracing side of a brace is always turned to that part of an article which makes the most lines.