?! Like that :)
No, a question mark and exclamation point are not considered full stops. They are punctuation marks used to end a sentence that conveys a question or strong emotion, respectively. A full stop is represented by a period and is used to end a declarative sentence.
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.
Yes, you can combine a question mark and an exclamation mark to convey a strong emotion with uncertainty, surprise, or disbelief. For example: "What an incredible achievement?!".
Your question actually points the way to the answer. If the sentence is a question, it should end with a question mark. When you include an exclamation within a question, you also include the exclamation point within the full stop of the sentence.
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
Period - . Exclamation Point - ! Question Mark - ?
no you nerd
The punctuation mark for exclamatory sentences is an exclamation point (!). It is used to show strong emotion, excitement, or emphasis in a sentence.
It really depends on what has been written after "where". If it's a question then it's acceptable to use a question mark and an exclamation point.
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.
A sentence expressing strong or sudden emotion is an exclamatory sentence. It will often have an exclamation point (mark) rather than a period.
period (.) question mark (?) exclamation point (!) comma (,)