- Unused
Horizontal tab
Line feed
- Unused
Carriage Return
- Unused
Space
! Exclamation mark
" Quotation mark
# Number sign
$ Dollar sign
% Percent sign
& Ampersand
' Apostrophe
( Left parenthesis
) Right parenthesis
* Asterisk
+ Plus sign
, Comma
- Hyphen
. Period (fullstop)
/ Solidus (slash)
0 - 9 Digits 0-9
: Colon
; Semi-colon
< Less than
= Equals sign
> Greater than
? Question mark
@ Commercial at
A - Z Letters A-Z
[ Left square bracket
\ Reverse solidus (backslash)
] Right square bracket
^ Caret
_ Horizontal bar (underscore)
` Acute accent
a - z Letters a-z
{ Left curly brace
| Vertical bar
} Right curly brace
~ Tilde
- Unused
Non-breaking Space
¡ Inverted exclamation
¢ Cent sign
£ Pound sterling
¤ General currency sign
¥ Yen sign
¦ Broken vertical bar
§ Section sign
¨ Umlaut (dieresis)
© Copyright
ª Feminine ordinal
« Left angle quote, guillemotleft
¬ Not sign
Soft hyphen
® Registered trademark
¯ Macron accent
° Degree sign
± Plus or minus
² Superscript two
³ Superscript three
´ Acute accent
µ Micro sign
¶ Paragraph sign
· Middle dot
¸ Cedilla
¹ Superscript one
º Masculine ordinal
» Right angle quote, guillemotright
¼ Fraction one-fourth
½ Fraction one-half
¾ Fraction three-fourths
¿ Inverted question mark
À Capital A, grave accent
Á Capital A, acute accent
 Capital A, circumflex accent
à Capital A, tilde
Ä Capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark
Å Capital A, ring
Æ Capital AE dipthong (ligature)
Ç Capital C, cedilla
È Capital E, grave accent
É Capital E, acute accent
Ê Capital E, circumflex accent
Ë Capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark
Ì Capital I, grave accent
Í Capital I, acute accent
Î Capital I, circumflex accent
Ï Capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark
Ð Capital Eth, Icelandic
Ñ Capital N, tilde
Ò Capital O, grave accent
Ó Capital O, acute accent
Ô Capital O, circumflex accent
Õ Capital O, tilde
Ö Capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark
× Multiply sign
Ø Capital O, slash
Ù Capital U, grave accent
Ú Capital U, acute accent
Û Capital U, circumflex accent
Ü Capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark
Ý Capital Y, acute accent
Þ Capital THORN, Icelandic
ß Small sharp s, German (sz ligature)
à Small a, grave accent
á Small a, acute accent
â Small a, circumflex accent
ã Small a, tilde
ä Small a, dieresis or umlaut mark
å Small a, ring
æ Small ae dipthong (ligature)
ç Small c, cedilla
è Small e, grave accent
é Small e, acute accent
ê Small e, circumflex accent
ë Small e, dieresis or umlaut mark
ì Small i, grave accent
í Small i, acute accent
î Small i, circumflex accent
ï Small i, dieresis or umlaut mark
ð Small eth, Icelandic
ñ Small n, tilde
ò Small o, grave accent
ó Small o, acute accent
ô Small o, circumflex accent
õ Small o, tilde
ö Small o, dieresis or umlaut mark
÷ Division sign
ø Small o, slash
ù Small u, grave accent
ú Small u, acute accent
û Small u, circumflex accent
ü Small u, dieresis or umlaut mark
ý Small y, acute accent
þ Small thorn, Icelandic
ÿ Small y, dieresis or umlaut mark
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.
― AaronHz (deangulberry), Sunday, 24 October 2004 00:14 (twenty-one years ago)
four months pass...
three weeks pass...
two weeks pass...
Listmania!
Books that change the way you think, at least briefly.
by joelhunt, who has an arts degree
1.
Less Than Zero
by BRET EASTON ELLIS (Paperback)
joelhunt's comments:
kind of makes you want to do drugs and sleep around, but leaves you feeling bleak about the whole thing.
2.
The Dharma Bums
by Jack Kerouac (Paperback)
joelhunt's comments:
this book left me seriously checking out the possibility of spending a summer firewatching in the wilderness. which is kind of weird.
3.
Sleepwalk : and Other Stories
by Adrian Tomine (Paperback - October 1998)
joelhunt's comments:
ever want to read stories starring socially awkward people experiencing uncomfortable silences? well, what if it had pretty pictures, too?
4.
The Tao of Pooh
by Benjamin Hoff (Paperback)
joelhunt's comments:
helps you to not freak out when things out of your control go wrong or askew. wish I had the discipline to really try this out.
5.
The Catcher in the Rye
by J.D. Salinger (Paperback)
joelhunt's comments:
there's a reason why it's a cliche to like this book. it's a really good book. it does tend to turn you into a bit of a smart-ass for a while though.
― rogers broseph (deangulberry), Wednesday, 27 April 2005 05:19 (twenty years ago)
two years pass...