| ‰ Punctuation |
| | | | apostrophe | ( ’ ' ) | | brackets | ( ( ) ), ( [ ] ), ( { } ), ( < >) | | colon | ( : ) | | comma | ( , ) | | dashes | ( ‒, –, —, ― ) | | ellipses | ( …, ... ) | | exclamation mark | ( ! ) | | full stop/period | ( . ) | | guillemets | ( « » ) | | hyphen | ( -, ‐ ) | | question mark | ( ? ) | | quotation marks | ( ‘ ’, “ ” ) | | semicolon | ( ; ) | | slash/stroke | ( / ) | | solidus | ( ⁄ ) | | Word dividers | | spaces | ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) (␠) (␢) (␣) | | interpunct | ( · ) | | General typography | | ampersand | ( & ) | | at sign | ( @ ) | | asterisk | ( * ) | | backslash | ( \ ) | | bullet | ( • ) | | caret | ( ^ ) | | copyright symbol | ( © ) | | currency | generic: | ( ¤ ) | | specific: | ฿, ¢, $, €, ƒ, ₲, ₴, ₭, £, ₦, ¥, ₩, ₪,₮ | | daggers | ( †, ‡ ) | | degree | ( ° ) | | ditto mark | ( 〃 ) | | inverted exclamation mark | ( ¡ ) | | inverted question mark | ( ¿ ) | | number sign/pound/hash | ( # ) | | numero sign | ( № ) | | ordinal indicator | (º, ª) | | percent (etc.) | ( %, ‰, ‱ ) | | pilcrow | ( ¶ ) | | prime | ( ′ ) | | registered trademark | ( ® ) | | section sign | ( § ) | | service mark | ( ℠ ) | | tilde | ( ~ ) | | trademark | ( ™ ) | | umlaut/diaeresis | ( ¨ ) | | underscore/understrike | ( _ ) | | vertical/broken bar, pipe | ( |, ¦ ) | | Uncommon typography | | asterism | ( ⁂ ) | | index/fist | ( ☞ ) | | therefore sign | ( ∴ ) | | because sign | ( ∵ ) | | interrobang | ( ‽ ) | | irony mark/percontation point | ( ؟ ) | | lozenge | ( ◊ ) | | reference mark | ( ※ ) | | tie | ( ⁀ ) | |
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A per mil or per mille (also spelled permil, per mill or promille) (Latin, literally meaning 'for (every) thousand') is a tenth of a percent or one part per thousand. It is written with the sign ‰ (Unicode U+2030)., which looks like a percent sign (%) with an extra zero at the end. It can be seen as a stylized form of the three zeros in the denominator, although it originates from an alteration of the percent sign.
A per mil is defined as:
- 1‰ = 10−3= 1⁄1000 = 0.001 = 0.1%
A per mil should not be confused with ppm (commonly pronounced "parts per mil" in the United States). A measurement in ppm means parts per million, and has as its denominator 1,000,000 and not 1,000.
[edit] Examples
Examples of common use are:
[edit] Related units