1. point
What's your point?
After a certain point, everything became a little more difficult.
I wish I could care more about my grades but it seems that, at a certain point of my life, I decided they wouldn't be so important anymore.
To get back to my original point, yesterday I sent the report off to Tokyo.
There is a fine line between speech that is terse and to the point and speech that is too abrupt.
The first point that requires clarification is that the design was purely experimental.
The point of true mutual understanding has not yet been reached between Japan and China.
He whittled the stick to a sharp point with his hunting knife.
May I ask a few more questions about that point? It's a little obscure.
Can you point me in the right direction?
Up to this point I have presented an overview of the growth of political unrest in the period.
Dr. Thatcher diagnosed her patient with generalized anxiety disorder because his symptoms didn't point to other diagnoses.
I should point out that it is necessary to re-examine the validity of Emmet's theory.
In point of fact, she had nothing to do with the scandal.
My strong point is my philosophy - nothing ventured nothing gained.
2. dot
Be at the station at eleven on the dot.
She bought a dress with dots.
She never got my email. I must have missed the dot in her email address or something
We watched her drive her car away, until it was no more than a dot in the distance.
He who minds his Ps and Qs will not forget to dot the "i's" and cross his "t's", when writing.
Will you put a dot before the names of the successful students?
A dot is a small spot.
Go to www dot shop dot pl
The female fish is yellow, with tiny orange dots on the tail.
The full stop at the end of this sentence is a dot.
a pattern of dots
Is there a dot between your names on your email address?
The plane was just a dot in the sky.
There are dots above the letters i and j.
Bye, see you tomorrow. "Oh, what's this? Leaving on the dot again?"