Stop it! You shouted.
"Stop it," you shouted.
Stop it. You shouted.
The absence of punctuation does not in itself cause a string of words to be defined as a fragment, nor does the presence of punctuation cause a string of words to be defined as a sentence. A sentence without a full stop is not a fragment; it is a sentence without a full stop. A phrase followed by a full stop is not a sentence; it is a fragment.
We all shouted, "Surprise!" as Anne arrived at her birthday celebration. The frantic father shouted, "Stop! There's a car coming!"
It depends on the type of punctuation and whether it's at the end of a sentence. A full stop isn't required after question marks or exclamation points as they already contain a full stop.
Either use a full stop "." or an exclamation mark "!", depending on the forcefulness of the command.
If you start it we will stop it!
The teacher shouted:Boys stop talking.
I shouted for him to stop.
The absence of punctuation does not in itself cause a string of words to be defined as a fragment, nor does the presence of punctuation cause a string of words to be defined as a sentence. A sentence without a full stop is not a fragment; it is a sentence without a full stop. A phrase followed by a full stop is not a sentence; it is a fragment.
We all shouted, "Surprise!" as Anne arrived at her birthday celebration. The frantic father shouted, "Stop! There's a car coming!"
A full stop.
It depends on the type of punctuation and whether it's at the end of a sentence. A full stop isn't required after question marks or exclamation points as they already contain a full stop.
If at the start of a sentence, it is written with a capital 's'. If used anywhere else, it is spelled 'suddenly', with no capital letters or specific punctuation, unless at the end of a sentence, wherein should be followed by a stop or full-stop.
No, standing on bus stop is not correct. Standing at the bus stop is correct.
smiling to you
.?!" full stop,question mark,exclamation mark,quotation marks.
full stop, it is only reasonable because whenever you end a sentence you put a full stop roughly 97% of the time
If it's used as a question, yes. If not, then it is a correct phrase but not a complete sentence.