Press and hold the ALT key and type the 4 numbers for each one:
¿--alt, 0191 / ñ--alt, 0241 / á--alt, 0225 / é--alt, 0233 / Ã--alt, 0237
ó--alt, 0243 / ú--alt, 0250 / ¡--alt, 0161 / Ñ--alt, 0209 / Ã--alt, 0193
É--alt, 0201 / Ã--alt, 0205 / Ó--alt, 0211 / Ú--alt, 0218
You might be talking about that funny punctuation mark in Spanish. If a sentence ended with an exclamation mark in English and you wanted to translate that in Spanish, you would always have to put the upside down exclamation mark first before you put down a capital letter.
Yes, upside down exclamation marks (¡) are used in Portuguese at the beginning of exclamatory sentences to indicate strong emphasis. This punctuation mark is also used in other Romance languages such as Spanish.
An upside down question mark (¿) is used at the beginning of a question in Spanish to denote that a question is being asked. In general, it serves the same purpose as a regular question mark but is specific to the Spanish language.
you do a lowercase i
To do an upsidedown 'i', just do an exclamation mark. '!'.
I use a small case "i" as an upside-down exclamation point at the start of a sentence written in the Spanish language, like so: "iQue bonita!"
A sentence in Spanish which ends in an exclamation point or question mark will have an upside-down one at the beginning, too. Hola, ¿como te llamas?
An upside down exclamation mark could be written as an "i". EX: (exclamation mark)=! (upside down exclamation mark)=i The "upside down exclamation mark" is really the letter "I" but lower case.
Yes, upside-down exclamation marks (¡) are used in Portuguese. They are used at the beginning of exclamatory sentences to indicate the tone of the sentence.
It's used in different languages like Spanish. In English we only add them to the end but Spanish doesn't... Example: English - this is so cool!... Spanish - ¡This is so cool!
upside horseshoe on the car
(Upside down !) Vaminos! (Upside down !) Rapidemente!