- For PAREN, see National Rebirth Party
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March Madness - The Bracket Blog - NYTimes.com
N.C.A.A. basketball tournament coverage from The New York Times. ... Search This Blog. All NYTimes.com Blogs " About The Bracket ...bracket.blogs.nytimes.com/?8dpcCollege Basketball and NCAA Tournament Commentary | Bracketography.com
Printable NCAA Bracket. Home. Blog. Features. Staff Articles. NBCSports Features ... Bracket Buster Coverage. Bubble Analysis. Championship Week Coverage ...bracketography.com/blog/index.htmlPENN - The Bracket Blog - NYTimes.com
The Bracket is delighted to get one final post from our favorite contributor, ... The Bracket Blog sends off its congratulations to the Penn Quakers, which became ...bracket.blogs.nytimes.com/tag/penn/Open Bracket Blog
... skip to sidebar. Open Bracket Blog. Open Bracket LLC is a company ... Read about our news, views, information on our products on this blog. Simplify. Be Great. ...openbracketllc.blogspot.com/MCF's Nexus of Improbability: Bracket Blogs
KRock ran a "Bracket Brawl" in which listeners could vote on favorite bands. ... Heck given the brackets, I didn't even vote for my own blog. ...mysteriouscloakedfigure.blogspot.com/2008/04/bracket-blogs.h...- For PAREN, see National Rebirth Party
- round brackets or parentheses: ( )
- square brackets or box brackets: 1
- curly brackets or braces: { }
- angle brackets, diamond brackets or chevrons: < > or
Brackets are punctuation marks used in pairs to set apart or interject text within other text. In computer science, the term is sometimes said to strictly apply to the square or box type.
There are four main types of brackets:
All these forms may be used according to typographical conventions that may vary from publication to publication and may vary even more from language to language. Some typical uses in English texts follow.
History
The angle bracket was the earliest type to appear in English. Desiderius Erasmus coined the term lunula to refer to the rounded parentheses (), recalling the round shape of the moon.
Usage
In addition to referring to the class of all types of brackets the unqualified word bracket is most commonly used to refer to a specific type of bracket. In modern American usage this is usually the square bracket whereas in modern British usage it is usually the parenthesis (round bracket).
In American usage parentheses are usually considered separately from other brackets, and calling them “brackets” at all is unusual even though they serve a similar function. In more formal usage “parenthesis” may refer to the entire bracketed text, not just to the punctuation marks used (so all the text in this set of round brackets may be said to be a parenthesis).
Parentheses ( )
Parentheses (singular, parenthesis)—sometimes called round brackets, curved brackets, oval brackets, or just brackets; or, colloquially, parens — contain material that could be omitted without destroying or altering the meaning of a sentence.
Parentheses may be used in formal writing to add supplementary information, such as “Sen. Edward Kennedy (D., Massachusetts) spoke at length.” They can also indicate shorthand for “either singular or plural” for nouns—e.g., “the claim(s)”.
Parenthetical phrases have been used extensively in informal writing and stream of consciousness literature. Of particular note is 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. In most writing, overuse of parentheses is usually a sign of a badly structured text. A milder effect may be obtained by using a pair of commas as the delimiter. If the sentence contains commas for other purposes visual confusion may result.
























