On a 2008 Ford Crown Victoria :
If you mean the warning light just to the right of your right turn signal
indicator arrow :
That is your Tire Pressure Monitoring System ( TPMS ) warning light
( if the TPMS warning light is flashing , either the spare tire is in use or a malfunction has been detected in the TPM system )
Tire pressure warning light either low tire pressure or uneven tire pressure
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.
I heard that it was due to the Emergancy break. Or because of the tire pressure is low. I have an '09 Eclipse.
I've had same questio. In my car... Come to find out its the tire pressure... One or more tires are low on air...
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.
On a 2000 Ford Crown Victoria : In the fuse panel below and to the left of the steering wheel , by the brake pedal ( it has a cover on it ) (fuse # 16 is a 20 amp fuse for the cigarette lighter and auxiliary power point )
According to the 2005 Ford Crown Victoria Owner Guide : In the fuse panel below the dash , on the drivers side : ( # 27 is a 20 amp fuse for the cigarette lighter , OBD II , and power point )
Exclamation point in a circle: handbrake is setExclamation point in a slice of a tire: tire pressure is low
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.