No Sauce.
Someone should kick both of those spies out of the hearings.
An ellipsis (plural: ellipses) is a punctuation mark consisting of three dots.
Use an ellipsis when omitting a word, phrase, line, paragraph, or more from a quoted passage. Ellipses save space or remove material that is less relevant. They are useful in getting right to the point without delay or disraction:
Full quotation: "Today, after hours of careful thought, we vetoed the bill."
With ellipsis: "Today … we vetoed the bill."
Although ellipses are used in many ways, the three-dot method is the simplest. Newspapers, magazines, and books of fiction and nonfiction use various approaches that they find suitable.
Some writers and editors feel that no spaces are necessary.
Example: I don't know…I'm not sure.
Others enclose the ellipsis with a space on each side.
Example: I don't know … I'm not sure.
Still others put a space either directly before or directly after the ellipsis.
Examples:
I don't know …I'm not sure.
I don't know… I'm not sure.
A four-dot method and an even more rigorous method used in legal works require fuller explanations that can be found in other reference books.
Propose an Amendment to replace
"Donald Trump" with "Hillary Clinton"
Washington Monument is 555.5' tall
Base is 111.1' underground.
666.6' in total
Today is 6666 day since 9/11