It would not be common practice to have a colon and question mark ever in sequence.
Quotation marks follow the question mark.
After the question mark.
After the question mark. Example: "Where are the keys?"
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, a question mark can come after a bracket, but its placement depends on the context. If the entire sentence, including the content within the brackets, is a question, you would place the question mark outside the closing bracket. However, if only the content inside the brackets is a question, the question mark should be placed inside the brackets.
In an APA 6th edition format, the word "head" is typically followed by a colon in the header of a title page.
full stop. . comma. , colon. : question mark. ? parenthesis. ( ) quotation marks. " " exclamation mark. ! dash. -
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
uhm.. well there is the exclamation mark.. !. the question mark.. ?. the period . and the comma... , and the semi colon (spelling??) ... ; .
Quotation marks follow the question mark.
Behind head light on drivers side. On the header board.
I don't believe that you should do this because both are a type of pause so if you want a pause but are asking a question then you will probabaly only need a question mark
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
: is a colon; is a semicolon
colon colon
Apostrophe (')Brackets ([ ], ( ), { }, < >)Colon (:)Comma (,)Dashes (-)Ellipsis (...)Exclamation Mark (!)Guillemets (« »)Hyphen (-)Period (.)Question Mark (?)Quotation Marks (" ", ' ')Semicolon (;)Slash (/)Solidus (⁄)
Colon is actually punctuation mark which indicates something. It is ":". If you really want a sentence with the word, "He lost a mark because he used the semi-colon instead of a colon." Also, according to biology, colon is the main part of the large intestine.