Punctuation marks often have several uses. The ellipsis shows (often meaningful) pauses - especially when accompanied by a distinctive intonation - in dialogue
as well as indicating omitted text in a long quotation. In my emails, I try to indicate the latter by putting them in brackets. E.g.
“Well… I guess I’ll be leaving now.”
"An ellipsis […] is a punctuation mark consisting of three dots. […] Ellipses save space or remove material that is less relevant"
Voragh
On Behalf Of
mayqel qunen'oS
SuStel:
> Don't use it to show verbal pauses. (If you
must show verbal pauses,
> only do so
when reporting dialogue, and use an ellipsis.)
I didn't know either what was an ellipsis in grammar, so googling it, I found:
"An ellipsis (plural: ellipses) is a punctuation mark consisting of three dots. Use an ellipsis when omitting a word, phrase, line, paragraph, or more from a quoted passage. Ellipses save space or remove material
that is less relevant"
By saying "verbal pauses" you mean parts of a dialogue where no
one speaks, right ?
But isn't the ellipsis purpose, to omit words ?
~ ckckckk