No, they're not. Neither are upside-down question marks.
Spanish: ¿Cómo te llamas?
Portuguese: Como te chamas?
Commonly used in the Spanish language, the use of the upside down question mark (or even an upside down exclamation mark) are used in questioning sentences.
I use a small case "i" as an upside-down exclamation point at the start of a sentence written in the Spanish language, like so: "iQue bonita!"
A sentence in Spanish which ends in an exclamation point or question mark will have an upside-down one at the beginning, too. Hola, ¿como te llamas?
Upside down is 'dessus-dessous' or 'sens dessus-dessous' in French.
Most of them are down in the lower right corner. The comma, period, slash and question mark are there, with the colon, semicolon and quotes; the exclamation point is at the upper left, generally shift-1. Other special characters are across the shifted numbers.
you do a lowercase i
To do an upsidedown 'i', just do an exclamation mark. '!'.
An upside down exclamation mark could be written as an "i". EX: (exclamation mark)=! (upside down exclamation mark)=i The "upside down exclamation mark" is really the letter "I" but lower case.
You might be talking about that funny punctuation mark in Spanish. If a sentence ended with an exclamation mark in English and you wanted to translate that in Spanish, you would always have to put the upside down exclamation mark first before you put down a capital letter.
upside horseshoe on the car
No, but it is the only language that uses these symbols for punctuation (other languages use them for things such as letters, tones, and clicks).
The inverted exclamation point can be entered by holding down the Alt key and pressing 0161, 173 or 8877 on the number pad. In Microsoft Word, the inverted question and exclamation marks can be typed by holding down the Ctrl, Alt, and shift keys while typing a normal question or exclamation mark, or by typing either mark at the start of the sentence whilst in the Spanish language mode.
Commonly used in the Spanish language, the use of the upside down question mark (or even an upside down exclamation mark) are used in questioning sentences.
It is sapnish. when you write an exclamation u do this: I'm hungry! goes to ¡ten go hambres!
"Did" in Spanish is an upside down question mark. There is no "did" word in Spanish. In fact, "do" and others also are upside down question marks.
¿ Just copy that lol
I use a small case "i" as an upside-down exclamation point at the start of a sentence written in the Spanish language, like so: "iQue bonita!"