Yes it's known as an interrobang.
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
Up until 1754 it was common to write spanish sentences using only one exclamation or question mark at the end of them. It was in that year that the Royal Academy of Language (RAE) decided to introduce the inverted question and exclamation mark, to help understanding the meaning of a sentence. In spanish, unlike many other languages, the sintax does not help to differentiate if a sentence is a question or a statement.
The two common sentence signals for the end of a sentence are a period (.) and a question mark (?). A period is used for declarative and imperative sentences, while a question mark is used for interrogative sentences.
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.
The end of a sentence can be a maked by any of three types of punctuation:A period (.)An exclamation point (!)A question mark (?).
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
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.
If the sentence is a statement it has to end in a period. If it is a question it would end in a question mark (?) and if the sentence indicates stong feeling it would end in an exclamation mark (!)
The different punctuation at the end of a sentence are mostly period ("."), Question mark ("?"), Exclamation mark ("!").
This *might* be referring to end punctuation, i.e. the punctuation mark at the end of a sentence or question. It might be a period, a question mark, an exclamation mark.
Up until 1754 it was common to write spanish sentences using only one exclamation or question mark at the end of them. It was in that year that the Royal Academy of Language (RAE) decided to introduce the inverted question and exclamation mark, to help understanding the meaning of a sentence. In spanish, unlike many other languages, the sintax does not help to differentiate if a sentence is a question or a statement.
The two common sentence signals for the end of a sentence are a period (.) and a question mark (?). A period is used for declarative and imperative sentences, while a question mark is used for interrogative sentences.
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.
You can mark the end of a sentence with an exclamation mark (!), a full stop (.), a question mark (?), or even three dots to signify an unfinished sentence (...), never a comma! So the answer is no.
.?!" full stop,question mark,exclamation mark,quotation marks.
The end of a sentence can be a maked by any of three types of punctuation:A period (.)An exclamation point (!)A question mark (?).
An exclamation mark comes at the end of a sentence, and you generally do not begin a new sentence with the word and, so in general you will not have the word and after an exclamation mark.