It represents a single-masted sailboat with a square sail.
No, actually, I don't know. I'm familiar with most editing marks, so it's probably something that whoever used it came up with. Can't you ask them?
If it's inserted into a quotation, the [!] by itself suggests that the person who pasted in the quotation was surprised by the part of the quote just before that, or would like you to take special note of it. But a squiggly underline isn't commonly used for anything, except by spell checkers to indicate misspelled words. Maybe they were really surprised.
Low tire pressure symbol. Adjust pressure and allow to reset after driving a few miles.
That's an exclamation point!
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
I think you are talking about the Low Tire Pressure indicator light
someone else- It is an exclamation mark. me- well i think it would be an exclamation point because at the end of the thing it has a dot. Like a point. So i think it should be a point and not a mark. me- But exclamation mark is what it is called.
If by caution light you mean circle with an exclamation point surrounding by brackets then I believe that is the indicator to let you know that the handbrake is on. this turns on when you lift the handle atleast one click from the bottom.
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
There is no difference between an exclamation mark and an exclamation point. They both refer to the same punctuation symbol (!) used to convey strong emotions or exclamatory statements in writing.
No
Also called an exclamation mark
you can have a question marked followed by an exclamation point.
Exclamation point in a circle: handbrake is setExclamation point in a slice of a tire: tire pressure is low