Jose Rizal knew that he would be the only rallying point of polities in the Philippines.
I've destroyed the hillock that you had pointed out to me.Under that hillock once housed a vast underground complex that served as a rallying point for our enemy.As a complex sentence requires that a given sentence contains one independent clause as well as at least one dependent clause, the above examples represent the proper usage of the word 'hillock' within a complex sentence.
No
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.
You could just say the definition of it and use that as a sentence:)
He used a PowerPoint graph as a visual aid to demonstrate his point.
Brief and to the point; effectively cut short "short and terse and easy to understand"
From his vantage point high in a tree, he could see the entire park.
She went point-by-point in the lecture. He highlighted the formula point-by-point.
A climax is the highest or most intense point in the development or resolution of something. A sample sentence would be: My career reached its climax when I became president of the company.
The focal point of a circle is the center.
I would use it correctly in a sentence, of course. Thank you for asking.
No it would be more appropriate to use a period.