no it doesn't because it is a punctuation not a word
No, periods at the end of a sentence do not count as a separate word. They are punctuation marks used to indicate the end of a sentence.
No, there should not be two periods when "am" is at the end of a sentence. Only one period is needed to end the sentence.
No, it is not necessary to end a sentence with two periods if the sentence ends with an abbreviation like "M.D." One period at the end of the abbreviation is sufficient for proper punctuation.
Four periods at the end of a sentence are called an ellipsis, used to indicate an omission in text.
Periods and commas are punctuation marks used in writing to indicate pauses or the end of a sentence.
Three periods at the end of a sentence, known as an ellipsis, are used to indicate an omission of words in a quote or a pause in speech. It can also convey a sense of suspense, trailing off, or unfinished thought.
If a sentence ends with an abbreviated word then only one period (full stop) is used.
It is called an ellipsis and usually indicates that a word or sentence has been intentionally omitted.
No, there should not be two periods when "am" is at the end of a sentence. Only one period is needed to end the sentence.
No, when using "OD" at the end of a sentence, you only need one period as the abbreviation already ends with a period. So it would be "O.D." with one period.
at the end of a sentence
Four periods at the end of a sentence are called an ellipsis, used to indicate an omission in text.
They are used to mark the end of a sentence.
This is relevant, for example, when selecting sentences with Ctrl-click. It seems that Word basically detects the end of a sentence by periods, question marks, exclamation marks, or end-of-paragraph marks (i.e., "enter" was pressed). This means that sometimes the sentences are selected incorrectly; for example, when an abbreviation ends with a period, Word incorrectly detects the end of a sentence.
Three periods at the end of a sentence, known as an ellipsis, are used to indicate an omission of words in a quote or a pause in speech. It can also convey a sense of suspense, trailing off, or unfinished thought.
Yes. There is no English word that cannot end a sentence.
Periods end a sentence. They are punctuation marks that look like dots.
No. You can never have two periods at the end of a sentence. "He will arrive at 6 P.M."