The image on a computer screen is composed of thousands of little dots called pixels, short for picture elements.
Many letters look similar but are distinguished from one another by dots above or below their central part, called 'iʿjam'.
Images on the computer screen are composed of tiny dots, called pixels.
Paintings are stored in the computer's memory as bit maps, patterns of the dots called pixels (picture elements) that form the images viewed on the screen.
Each character, in turn, may be made up of a few dozen dots, called pixels.
Characters and graphics are represented in memory by dots, called pixels.
"I can't say that any of us here at the highest command post of all ever noticed anything much except a dot called Gettysburg."
The dot called interpunct was regularly used in classical Latin to separate words.
The images you see on your monitor are made of tiny dots called pixels.
Since this is pretty difficult, the vowels can be marked as dots called niqqud (plural niqqudim).