How many ellipsis should there be?

Ellipsis, also called ellipsis, is a symbol indicating ellipsis in an article. Ellipsis is represented by six dots, occupying two spaces, and every three dots occupy one space, which is written in the center of the space. If you are trapped in an omitted whole article, or a line cut from a poem, or several connected lines, then the ellipsis will be twelve o'clock, occupying a position of four squares and one line.

Reference: ylaps.edu/~intra/p2chi/wu/puntuation/bill/bill4

Our teacher said that ellipsis must have six points and should be written in two spaces. But why does someone write 3 points? It is because some software can type 3 points at a time on the computer that people mistakenly think that they only write 3 points.

Reference: What the teacher said

It must be six o'clock.

The use of ellipsis in Chinese writing is the words that should be described after ellipsis. Use ellipsis: If you need to use ellipsis in Chinese writing, you should put six points in the middle level of a box. Even if there is no box, the ellipsis should occupy two characters. The situation is: ... (Due to computer editing, the ellipsis displayed on the computer may not be as mentioned just now, please pay attention! ) Less commonly used method: When writing, if one or more lines in the whole article or poem are omitted, the ellipsis is 12 points, * * * occupies the position of four squares, and * * * writes these points on one line. Common problems in using ellipsis: Because ellipsis means "and so on", it can't be used with ellipsis when it means "and so on" in an article. For example, the fruits in this box include apples, oranges, raspberries and so on. (wrong! Correct: The fruits in this box include apples, oranges and cranberries. ...

6 o'clock

Three squares!

It should be 6 o'clock.

& gt It should be 5 o'clock!

Reference: the teacher's professor

It should be 6 o'clock.