It means a case has been sent to the trial court. This term is generally used after a preliminary hearing in a magistrate court. It may also be used if a case is in a lower court and is bound over to the general trial court for a jury trial.
That may mean the line segment that joins points labelled Q and Z.
It indicates multiplication by a thousand
It means recurring, so rather than writing out an endless line of 3s, 3.333333333333 etc they would write the 3.333 with the last 3 having a line over it.
You are referring to a special case of shape its called a line
A lower case c with a horizontal line above it means "with". This character might be seen as instructions for medication "should be taken "with" food"
"s" with a line over it.That would be the letter s (lower case) with a horizontal line over the top.
A "p" with a horizontal line over it means "after"
A c with a line over it means with in medical terms, and an s with a line over it means without in medical terms. I don't know of any major revision in that tradition.
They aren't. Virgo looks like a lower case "m" with a lower-case "p" bumped up against it with the tail crossed over the the common line. Scorpio looks like a lower-case "m" with the end leg of the "m" extended below the line and turned up to the right at a 45 degree angle in what appears to be a tail..
A lower case a with a line over it means before in medical terminology. For instance, ac means before mealsLower case a with a line over it stands for "ante," and means "before" in medical terms.
The dot over the lower-case "i" is called a pip.
The cross of the lower case letter "t" is called a tisten. The dot over the lower case letter "i" is called a tiddle.
The medical abbreviation for 'with' is a 'c' with a dash above it. It stands for the Latin word 'c u m' (coom). The medical shorthand for 'without' is an 's' with a dash above it, which stands for the Latin word 'sine'.
With
As in general use, @ is often used for "at" in medical contexts.
It means a case has been sent to the trial court. This term is generally used after a preliminary hearing in a magistrate court. It may also be used if a case is in a lower court and is bound over to the general trial court for a jury trial.