I use a full stop to indicate the end of a sentence. It helps the reader understand where one thought ends and another begins.
I ate breakfast because I was hungry. I went for a walk because the weather was nice. I wear a mask because it protects me and others.
In British English, "full stop" is used to refer to the punctuation mark (.), while "period" is the term used in American English. Both words are commonly used interchangeably to denote the same punctuation mark.
There may or may not be a full stop at the end of a sentence fragment. It is the grammatical content that determines whether it is a fragment. For example, 'She opened the' is a fragment, whether there is a full stop after it or not.
"Use your head" in Portuguese can be translated as "Use a cabeça".
14 punctuation marks in English grammar:1. Period ( . )2. Ellipses (...)3. Comma ( , )4. Semicolon ( ; )5. Apostrophe ( ' )6. Dash ( --- )7. Hypen ( - )8-9. Quotation Marks (" " ) and ( ' ')10. ItalicsExample: Can you spell wonder?11. Parentheses ( )12. Brackets [ ]13. Colon ( : )14. Slash ( / )
Yes it's the abbreviation of versus so it should have a fullstop after it.
yes fullstop
No before it.
a fullstop
i have no idea fullstop
Lev (no fullstop)
no (fullstop)
No
Its Ctrl+ fullstop (period)
I don't get it, but girls can't get girls pregnant, fullstop.
Firstly, it depends on the country and the writing conventions followed.The abbreviations that have dots means that more then one word is shortened (for example: the United State is usually abbreviated to U.S.)However, it is important to note that writing conventions are now moving towards omitting the fullstop altogether. In the UK, the fullstop is not used in abbreviations which include the first and last letters of a single word, such as Mr, Mrs,Dr or St. In the United States, the fullstop is retained, e.g. Mr., Mrs.,Dr. and St.In Australia, which follows the UK conventions, the states are not abbreviated with fullstops. New South Wales, for example, is abbreviated as NSW, not N.S.W.Exceptions to the above are abbreviations of Latin words, such as e.g., which is short for exempli gratia, meaning for 'example', or a.m., short for ante meridiem. Such Latin terms currently retain the fullstops, but again, there is an increasing trend towards omitting the fullstop.
If you mean Gay as in Pants or Trash, then because it is a pretty awful and sad thing to do to anyone. Bullying is wrong, fullstop.