I got my car this morning.
Did you see what he did?
Run quickly!
Don't do that again.
John, Jane, and Phil went to dinner.
It has to be 5:00 PM somewhere.
"Please come home," I begged.
My Bonnie lies over the ocean; my Bonnie lies over the sea.
Do you watch the show called @Midnight?
Lindalee & Larry are in love.
I want a loan with only 3% interest.
The house cost $129,000.
The fine print on the coupon said, *only good until June 1.
I went to the party (even though I didn't want to.)
Bring your dog/s with you.
Will you be my +one.
Hard work = success.
There are fourteen punctuation marks in English grammar.
Terminal punctuation marks are used at the end of a sentence, such as periods, question marks, and exclamation points. Internal punctuation marks are used within a sentence, such as commas, semicolons, and colons.
There is no specific term "external punctuation," but punctuation marks are symbols used in writing to clarify meaning and separate different parts of a sentence. Examples include periods, commas, question marks, and exclamation points.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
It would be: Yes, we can. (or more emphatically) Yes, we can!
The fourteen punctuation marks are used in a sentence to convey meaning, organization, and clarity. They include the period, question mark, exclamation mark, comma, semicolon, colon, dash, hyphen, parentheses, brackets, ellipsis, quotation marks, apostrophe, and slash. Each punctuation mark serves a specific purpose in indicating pauses, separating ideas, indicating emphasis, indicating omission, and showing possession, among other functions.
Yes, parentheses are considered punctuation marks commonly used to set off additional or clarifying information within a sentence.
Generally, punctuation marks such as periods and question marks will precede the final quotation mark at the end of the sentence.
No, "full punctuation" is not a specific type of punctuation; it usually refers to the use of all standard punctuation marks like periods, commas, question marks, exclamation points, etc. for proper grammar and sentence structure.
Periods end a sentence. They are punctuation marks that look like dots.
The Tagalog equivalent of "punctuation mark" is "tandang punctuation." Examples of punctuation marks in Tagalog are tuldok (period), kuwit (comma), tandang pandoble (quotation marks), at tandang pananong (question mark).
You can see a list of all the punctuation marks in English in any comprehensive grammar or punctuation guide. Websites like Grammarly and Purdue OWL also provide resources on punctuation marks with explanations and examples.