The long dash is used in pairs or singularly at the end of a sentence to add information that may be about the same subject but not relevant to the topic at hand.
e.g: my mother likes roses and tulips -- she displays flowers in her room.
the forward slash is most commonly used as a shorthand for 'or'.
e.g: my mother buys roses/tulips to display in her room.
ellipses (...) indicate unlisted examples, a pause or the passing of time.
e.g: my mother displays the flowers in her room: roses, tulips, violets, sunflowers, lilies...
e.g: "my... mother displays flowers in her room," she said hesitantly.
e.g: "... my mother displays flowers in her room," she told me after a few minutes of silence.
brackets around a word used in a quote indicate that the word has been omitted.
I love food. I like French fries. How do you know, special people, and why are you (IDK the answer here)
What are your answer choices ?