Yes, "Look out below!" is an exclamatory sentence.
The stem in an exclamatory sentence is the main part of the sentence that conveys the message or emotion being expressed. It is usually the subject and verb of the sentence without any added emphasis or exclamatory words.
The following sentence can be rewritten as an exclamatory sentence by adding an exclamation mark at the end: "I can't believe we won the championship!"
An exclamatory sentence always ends with an exclamation point (!) to express strong emotions or excitement.
An interjection is a word or phrase used to express emotion, often appearing in a sentence on its own or followed by punctuation. An exclamatory sentence is a type of sentence that conveys strong emotion, typically ending with an exclamation mark. While interjections can be part of an exclamatory sentence, not all interjections are exclamatory sentences.
exclamatory sentence is very useful. You left him there? Real Exclamatory.
"Wow!" would be an exclamatory sentence.
an exclamatory sentence
his sentences were not Exclamatory. The news was exclamatory for everyone.
an exclamatory sentence is a sencence with an exclamation mark at the end or an overly exciting sentence
Yes, "Look out below!" is an exclamatory sentence.
like this? Hello! or this? An exclamatory sentence is blah blah blah.... Which one???
If you mean "Is the following sentence a declarative, interrogative, or exclamatory sentence, 'He huffed and he puffed and he blew the house down!' ?" Then it would be an exclamatory sentence.
This is an example of an exclamatory sentence using the word happening!
no
The stem in an exclamatory sentence is the main part of the sentence that conveys the message or emotion being expressed. It is usually the subject and verb of the sentence without any added emphasis or exclamatory words.
The sentence "What a rainy day it is!" is an exclamatory sentence that expresses strong emotion or excitement. It typically begins with the word "what" followed by a noun or noun phrase, and ends with an exclamation point. In this case, the speaker is emphasizing the heaviness or intensity of the rain.