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What Does A Double Asterisk Mean After A Word

What does double asterisk ** mean in texting?

This girl sent me it one time after a sentence even though she never sent it in correctly and then she followed up texting me the next day sending ** just by itself

What does an asterick mean before and after a word?

Asterisks are mostly used around *certain words* where emphasis is desired. "I want *you* to know the truth!"

In your example, 'wife' is surrounded by asterisks to indicate that she is not really his wife (they aren't married), but he refers to her as his wife as if they really were married.

What does it mean when someone puts asterisks on a word?

I frequently see people put asterisks on a specific word in their question, I'm not exactly sure why, lol. Like, here's a sentence I saw today “Sorry for the *long* question.” Is it just used to put emphasis on a particular word? I'm not sure.

What does it mean when you put an asterisk at the end of a sentence?

Yup, an asterisk usually means that there is a footnote at the bottom of the page.A footnote can be a reference if the reader wants to find more information about a topic , or it can be information about where the statement came from.A footnote can provide further clarification about a subject for which there might not have been space in the text, or if it is off topic.A footnote can be found in both non fiction and fiction. For example, several footnotes are used in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy with hilarious results**in fact, the editors are now looking for writers because the last lot were the first ones against the wall when the revolution came.

Why do people put asterisks (*) around words?

I've noticed that people sometimes put asterisks (which are these: * ) around a word. Here is a REAL example:

Example 1: People *should* blame the producers...

Is it like quotation marks (these: " ), or is it different? I know that if they use it like this (made up example):

Example 2: *runs the other way* AAAAH!
Example 3: *gasps* No way!

It means the person is doing the action or is pretending to, or that is how they'd react if they were actually talking to someone. Is this at all related to the way it was used in Example 1?

So my questions is:
What does it mean when people put asterisks around A word (not several words, just ONE word), like in Example 1?

What does an asterisk mean infront of a crossword clue?

if the puzzle has a title, it means that this answer is part of the title group of clues.

What is the meaning if the asterisk in mathematics?

Whatever the author defines it to mean, along with most other symbols. The basics (+ - × ÷ ^) usually don’t need to be defined nowadays though. I tend to use such things as binary operation symbols( * ○ ●• □ ■ ▪ ) and then I will define something like:[math]α*β=\dfrac{α^2-β^2}{2αβ}[/math]Or[math]x▪y=x×y-x*y[/math]It can also be used as to draw attention to later notes or footnotes of a page. I prefer to number my footnotes, but others may use [Idea 1]*, [Idea 2]**,etc. But I might use them for later notes:“…this referenced Imaginary numbers*…”“Imaginary Numbers* are such that…”It is often used in algebra to denote a set exclusive of Zero where Zero would usually appear in that set: R is the set of All Real Numbers, but [math]\dfrac{1}{x}[/math] only works for R[math]^*[/math] or {{R}-{0}} and not for the whole set R.

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