Multiple exclamation points are used to mean one thing in comic books and posters, and another thing in diaries and letters, but in proper writing they are not used at all.
1.Topic Sentence 2.Introduction to First Point 3.Point/evidence 4.Analysis (can be more than one sentence) 5.Introduction to Second Point 6.Point/evidence 7.Analysis (can be more than one sentence) 8.Conclusion
Yes, a sentence can have more than one subject. This is known as a compound subject, where two or more subjects share the same predicate in a sentence.
The sentence "I like him more than you" is ambiguous. It could mean "I like him more than I like you" or it could mean "I like him more than you like him."
Yes. There can be more than one vanishing point.
A line segment has one more point than a ray
it can
Example sentence - I had more questions for the interviewer than he had for me.
Example sentence - The rifle has more recoil than I expected.
Of course not!
A sentence expressing strong or sudden emotion is an exclamatory sentence. It will often have an exclamation point (mark) rather than a period.
In the sentence 'She visited us more often than we expected' yes, expected is a right form in this sentence.
Alex is more clever than Vice.