Exclamatory
The use of an exclamation mark "!!" gives a sentence the sense of urgency.
You can use an exclamation mark when you're saying anything. An exclamatory sentence is a sentence that demonstrates a sharp or sudden utterance or a vehement expression of protest or complaint.
An exclamation point is often used with an interjection. Interjections usually express some kind of emotion and are capable of standing on their own. Hey! That's my car! (hey is the interjection.) Ouch! I stubbed my toe! (ouch is the interjection.)
You can mark the end of a sentence with an exclamation mark (!), a full stop (.), a question mark (?), or even three dots to signify an unfinished sentence (...), never a comma! So the answer is no.
Ending a phrase with the term 'good luck' does not require the use of an exclamation mark. The use of an exclamation mark is dependent on the meaning or tone of the sentence, not the use of any particular word or phrase. There are instances in which the use of an exclamation mark after the phrase 'good luck' may distort the intended meaning, such as, 'I have not had good luck'.
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.
One defining property of a sentence is that it ends with a period (full stop, question mark or exclamation mark).
Declarative-ends with a period Imperative-ends with a period Exclamatory-ends with an exclamation mark Interrogative-ends with a question mark
Sorry, but the exclamation point ends that one-word sentence, Crunch!
An imperative sentence is a command or suggestion. It does not become an exclamatory sentence just because it ends in an exclamation mark. An exclamatory sentence expresses emotion or fervor, and may be declarative or interrogative (for example, a strong statement or an hysterical question).
Of course it can! Imperative sentences are sentences that tell someone to do something. These may be strong commands or weaker requests. If they are strong commands, they will usually have an exclamation mark at the end. For example, the sentence, "Get out!" is imperative and ends with an exclamation mark.
The 4 kinds of sentence according to usage:DECLARATIVE - statement (ends with period)example: The car is green.INTERROGATIVE - question (ends with question mark)example: Are you hungry?IMPERATIVE - command (may end with either a period or exclamation mark)example: Eat your vegetables.EXCLAMATORY - express strong feeling (normally ends with an exclamation point)example: Oops! What a mess! Sorry.
in sentences there can be an exclamation mark in it!
An exclamation mark comes at the end of a sentence, and you generally do not begin a new sentence with the word and, so in general you will not have the word and after an exclamation mark.
An exclamatory sentence conveys strong emotions or excitement and usually ends with an exclamation mark. For example: "What a beautiful day!" or "I can't believe it!"
When i use force in a sentence i end it with a exclamation mark.
You can use a period (.), an exclamation mark (!), or a question mark (?) to end a sentence.