Question mark.
It begins with the first word and ends when a form of punctuation is placed. It can vary from a period to a question mark to an exclamation point. Other punctuation is used to format sentences in certain ways.
the exclamation mark then the speech mark "will we ever see him again?"
To answer the question "How are you?", use the first person, subjective, personal pronoun "I" or "we", since the pronoun "you" is both singular and plural. Examples:How are you? I am fine.How are you? We are fine.
The question mark was not invented by one specific person. It evolved over time as a punctuation symbol to indicate the end of a question in written language. Its precise origin is not definitively known, but it has been used in some form since ancient times.
The symbol for gold, Au, comes from the Latin word "aurum," which means gold. The symbol Au is derived from the first two letters of the word.
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.
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.
If the exclamation mark is part of the quote then before, otherwise after. The following sentences contain examples:A sudden cry came from the back of the house: "Help! Help!"He claimed that the booze in his drawer was "medicine"!
You have to catch the other 26 Unown first.
you first have to capture ALL the other unown letters
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.
Most people would use a period. You could use a question mark for the first and an exclamation mark for a command.
Origin: This symbol is stylized et, Latin for "and." Although it was invented by the Roman scribe Marcus Tullius Tiro in the first century B.C., it didn't get its strange name until centuries later. In the early 1800s, schoolchildren learned this symbol as the 27th letter of the alphabet: X, Y, Z, &. But the symbol had no name. So, they ended their ABCs with "and, per se, and" meaning "&, which means 'and.'" This phrase was slurred into one garbled word that eventually caught on with everyone: ampersand. Origin: When early scholars wrote in Latin, they would place the word questio - meaning "question" - at the end of a sentence to indicate a query. To conserve valuable space, writing it was soon shortened to qo, which caused another problem - readers might mistake it for the ending of a word. So they squashed the letters into a symbol: a lowercased q on top of an o. Over time the o shrank to a dot and the q to a squiggle, giving us our current question mark. Origin: Like the question mark, the exclamation point was invented by stacking letters. The mark comes from the Latin word io, meaning "exclamation of joy." Written vertically, with the i above the o, it forms the exclamation point we use today.
The chemical symbol for the element sodium consists of a first capital letter and a second non capital letter: "Na". The atomic number of sodium is 11. (The term "first symbol" used in the question has no particular meaning of which I am aware.)
It begins with the first word and ends when a form of punctuation is placed. It can vary from a period to a question mark to an exclamation point. Other punctuation is used to format sentences in certain ways.
the exclamation mark then the speech mark "will we ever see him again?"
The Motorola Symbol MC50 cell phone was first released in May of 2007. A full users guide can be found online to answer any question you may have on this device.