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.
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".
An interjection would normally be followed by a full stop. If it is also an exclamation, it can be followed by an exclamation mark. Not all interjections are exclamations, and exclamation marks should be used sparingly.
no. It would very unusual to place an exclamation mark immediately after a conjunction. The reason is that conjunctions do not occur at the end of sentence as do exclamation marks.
This is not a single punctuation with a separate name. It signifies a question asked in an exclamatory way.
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 (!.).
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
It's known as an interrobang or interabang.
full stop. . comma. , colon. : question mark. ? parenthesis. ( ) quotation marks. " " exclamation mark. ! dash. -
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 :)
.?!" full stop,question mark,exclamation mark,quotation marks.
uhm.. well there is the exclamation mark.. !. the question mark.. ?. the period . and the comma... , and the semi colon (spelling??) ... ; .
period,exclamation point.and exclamation mark