mark exclaimed we certainly have correct
The sentence would be: "You won!" exclaimed Georgianna?
The correct way to say this would be "Mark HAD lunch." This means he already ate it. You could also say "Mark WILL HAVE lunch," meaning sometime in the future. Another correct sentence would be "Mark HAS lunch." This means that he is in possession of lunch but has not eaten it yet.
No, the correct sentence would be "Who is the singing woman?" by adding a question mark at the end. It is asking for the identity of a woman who is singing.
In casual writing you might be able to replace a question mark with a period, especially in dialog to indicate intonation, but usually the sentence structure of questions is different, so that a period will not be correct. For example, "Where did you go?" is correct as a question, but "Where did you go." is not correct.
No. The structurally correct form is "Mark's and my visit" because the possessive must extend to Mark as it would if there were no compound subject. Ordinarily you would avoid the problem and say "our" instead of "Mark's and my."
No, it is not grammatically correct to use both an exclamation mark and a question mark at the end of the same sentence. Choose one or the other based on the intended tone of the sentence.
If you put a question mark after it I think it is.
there shouldn't be a question mark. but other than that, yes
That question mark is not correct I meant to do a exclamation mark. Sorry
This sentence is an example of a question. A question mark should go at the end of this question. Any sentence that starts with words like what, where, why which, and who requires a question mark, so it is correct in punctuation.
Yes, it is possible for an exclamation mark to be followed by a question mark in the same sentence, but it certainly depends on the context. The exclamation would have to form part of the question.
The correct spelling is celebration.An example sentence is: "the celebration was brilliant".Another example sentence is: "we will have a celebration to mark this occasion".