?!
It's called an interrobang.
This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
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?
Yes, you can combine a question mark and an exclamation mark to convey a strong emotion with uncertainty, surprise, or disbelief. For example: "What an incredible achievement?!".
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
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.
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.
How amazing! As it is not a question, an exclamation (!) would be used.How are you? Is a question, a question mark (?) would be used.
Yes, it is possible for an exclamation mark to be followed by a question mark in the same sentence, but it certainly depends on the context. The exclamation would have to form part of the question.
"Between" an exclamation mark? Exclamation marks do not change the normal rules of capitalization.
Yes you can do this.
This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
There is no difference between an exclamation mark and an exclamation point. They are two names for the same thing.
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
Question mark is thought to originate from the Latin quaestiō meaning question. Exclamation mark is also thought to originate from the Latin exclamation of "joy".
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?
interrobang