VS.

Comer vs. Comma

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Comernoun

One in a race who is catching up to others and shows promise of winning.

Commanoun

(typography) The punctuation mark ⟨,⟩ used to indicate a set off parts of a sentence or between elements of a list.

Comernoun

(figuratively) One who is catching up in some contest and has a likelihood of victory.

Commanoun

A similar-looking subscript diacritical mark.

Comernoun

One who arrives.

β€˜The champ will face all comers.’;

Commanoun

A European and North American butterfly, Polygonia c-album, of the family Nymphalidae.

Comernoun

One who comes, or who has come; one who has arrived, and is present.

Commanoun

(music) a difference in the calculation of nearly identical intervals by different ways.

Comernoun

someone with a promising future

Commanoun

(genetics) A delimiting marker between items in a genetic sequence.

Comernoun

someone who arrives (or has arrived)

Commanoun

In Ancient Greek rhetoric, a short clause, something less than a colon, originally denoted by comma marks. In antiquity it was defined as a combination of words having no more than eight syllables in all. It was later applied to longer phrases, e.g. the Johannine comma.

Commanoun

(figurative) A brief interval.

Commanoun

A character or point [,] marking the smallest divisions of a sentence, written or printed.

Commanoun

A small interval (the difference between a major and minor half step), seldom used except by tuners.

Commanoun

a punctuation mark (,) used to indicate the separation of elements within the grammatical structure of a sentence

Commanoun

anglewing butterfly with a comma-shaped mark on the underside of each hind wing

Comma

The comma , is a punctuation mark that appears in several variants in different languages. It has the same shape as an apostrophe or single closing quotation mark (’) in many typefaces, but it differs from them in being placed on the baseline of the text.

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