Well, what WOULD you do if you were really mad? You can end the sentence just about any way you want when you're the writer! Would you stomp your feet? Grit your teeth? Chew up nails and spit out bullets?
He was so mad at me, I could see the animosity in his eyes.
Agitate is like when you get mad, so you could say : The kid says I agitate him.
No. The hyperbole is more often a sentence which exaggerates for the sake of effect as in "I am so mad I could chew nails."
Mandy was mad that she could not make it to her drama club, and so she would not be able to be in the play.
The adjective mad (madder, maddest) describes someone or something as:insane: Only a mad person could do such a thing.furious: He was so mad that I thought he would explode.enthusiastic: She is mad about dancing.wild: They throw the maddest parties.rabid: Several of the animals were tested, and they discovered some mad rats.frantic: Having overslept, I made a mad scramble to dress and go.
In proper English usage you do not end a sentence in a preposition, so at should not end the sentence Where is Jasmine is sufficient.
cause we mad black and we robb steal and pretend to get injured so we could get money. We mad fagits
So you puR period after a website link if at end of sentence
"She was so mad that her boyfriend cheated on her that she took a sledgehammer and destroyed his car."
Peter's mad girl mad friend ? Could you please reword your question so it makes a modicum of sense.
So they can know when the sentence ends.
Yes, it is grammatically correct to end a sentence with the word "so." However, it may be informal or conversational in style.