Make sure your Number Lock is on. Hold down the Alt button. Use the number pad on your keyboard (not the top row) and enter the numbers 173, then release the Alt key. Your upside-down exclamation point will then appear.
This type of character is called an ALT character. There is an entire list of various characters at the Related link below.
¡¡¡ On my HP, I use Alt-173. (Hold down Alt and type 173, then release).
Make sure you are using the numeric keypad, and not the normal numbers at the top of your keyboard to do so. You can also get it through various applications, like Microsoft Word, by going to the Insert Menu and then to Symbol. You'll find it in some of the fonts.
Assuming you are using windows, go to the character map.
Where the ! is typed by pressing the shift and the 1 key the ¡ character is typed by pressing the alt and 1 keys. In most typefaces it looks better than it does here!
It depends on what type of computer you are using.
you hold down the shift key and press 1
You have a tire low on air.
To make a large exclamation point, press The ! on your keyboard while pressing ENTER at the same time. To make a small exclamation point, click the chat bar and press shift at the same time as pressing the ! on your keyboard.
If it is to the left of the 1 key it is called the tilde key
Do you mean this: ~ It's called a tilde.
what is the warning light on the lowest right hand corner of a mistsubishi endeavor ? it looks like an upsidedown half circle with an exclamation point in the middle and a jagged line as the bottom of the half circle.
someone else- It is an exclamation mark. me- well i think it would be an exclamation point because at the end of the thing it has a dot. Like a point. So i think it should be a point and not a mark. me- But exclamation mark is what it is called.
There is no difference between an exclamation mark and an exclamation point. They both refer to the same punctuation symbol (!) used to convey strong emotions or exclamatory statements in writing.
No
Also called an exclamation mark
you can have a question marked followed by an exclamation point.
Exclamation point in a circle: handbrake is setExclamation point in a slice of a tire: tire pressure is low
Normally, you would not use both a question mark and an exclamation point in the same sentence. If a sentence is interrogative, it is not an exclamation. An interrogative sentence ends in a question mark, and an exclamation ends in an exclamation point.