This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
No, typically a comma is not placed after a punctuation mark such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point. Commas are used to separate elements within a sentence.
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?
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
No it would be more appropriate to use a period.
no you can't because a period is already a punctuation but you can add an exclamation mark after a question mark to make a surprised sound but that's unformal
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.
There is no one single punctuation mark to signal both interrogation and exclamation. For that you should just combine the question mark - "?" - and the exclamation mark - "!" - into "?!" and use that instead. Example: "What do you mean there are no cookies left?!" Hope this helped :)
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.
The different punctuation at the end of a sentence are mostly period ("."), Question mark ("?"), Exclamation mark ("!").
period (.) question mark (?) exclamation point (!) comma (,)
The four types of sentences are declarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamatory. The corresponding punctuation marks are period (.), question mark (?), exclamation mark (!), and period followed by exclamation mark (!.).
No, typically a comma is not placed after a punctuation mark such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point. Commas are used to separate elements within a sentence.
No, you do not. A question mark or exclamation point replaces a full stop. ********************************* The answer above is correct. An exclamation or question mark replaces the full stop and signals the end of the sentence! ********************************* I respectfully point out that is does matter...the question mark and the exclamation mark come first, followed by the full stop. For example, the following words with punctuation are presented in this way..."What child is this?". Without the full stop you would be not aware that the sentence was concluded.
.?!" full stop,question mark,exclamation mark,quotation marks.
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?
uhm.. well there is the exclamation mark.. !. the question mark.. ?. the period . and the comma... , and the semi colon (spelling??) ... ; .
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.