Look at all this debris!
You could say: "The amount of debris from that tornado was devastating!"
No it is not. It is an exclamation sentence.
you use that in science when doing project with your teacher and your classmates An example of a sentence would be: After the earthquake hit the town, survivors were forced to pick their way through the debris in order to see if any of their possessions had been left intact.
Predict this, scientist!
I am partial to thinking of eureka as meaning "I have found it!" You could use the word, almost always with an exclamation mark, to indicate a sudden or particularly deep insight that solves a long standing problem.
When i use force in a sentence i end it with a exclamation mark.
No
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
The use of an exclamation mark "!!" gives a sentence the sense of urgency.
The use of an exclamation mark "!!" gives a sentence the sense of urgency.
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.
An exclamation sentence is a sentence that has something being expressed or exclaimed.
An exclamation sentence is a sentence that has something being expressed or exclaimed.
Whose book is this?
Well generally speaking an Exclamation is to imply excitement, commonly used at the end of a sentence. The only use I can think of in a sentence would be something like: "The person used an exclamation at the end of their sentence" or "They they said with exclamation". A more common use would be to say someone "Exclaimed" something Example: "It's very windy outside Mr H. Exclaimed" Hope this is of some help..
Use an exclamation point when the sentence has a lot of emotion. Look out! Use the punctuation properly! Your teacher is right behind you! Most sentences with exclamation points are short an exciting.
It is used at the end of a sentence, that is not a question or exclamation