well on the upside i got elected class captain
"As I played back the video, I saw that I had been holding my camera upside down." "The latest designer in Paris has turned the fashion world upside down with his brilliance." "In Spanish, an upside-down question mark precedes each interrogative sentence or quote."
Invert means to turn inside out or turn upside down. You could use a sentence like, she pushed the button until it was in an invert position.
"Had his foot not gotten caught in the pneumatic hose, he would have fallen to a certain death, but now the upside down, dangling roofer swung to and fro from the eave, hollering for help."
Bob ended up getting his head SPLIT open after Richard cracked him upside the head with a baseball bat.
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!"
If you invert your sock, you will be wearing it inside out or upside down.
Yes, upside-down exclamation marks (¡) are used in Portuguese. They are used at the beginning of exclamatory sentences to indicate the tone of the sentence.
Turn it upside-down
Turn the multipliers upside down !
He held his spoon upside down so that its concave side for holding his soup was rendered useless.
Because you've got your book upside down. It's possible you've been confused by an inverted question mark "¿" at the beginning of a question. HTH Sam "SammyTheSnae" Penny
To make it clear from the start that you are asking a question. In English, the structure of the sentence tells you at once whether the sentence is a statement or a question. "He is a good student". "Is he a good student?" In Spanish it is not so obvious and you need ¿ at the beginning of your question and ? at the end.