Yes, or excitement, surprise, urgency, or other strong feeling. Exclamation points are best used very sparingly. That means don't use them often (and never more than one at a time) in serious writing. They do not belong in formal writing at all, or only under very rare circumstance. But of course casual correspondence and e-mail don't have to follow the rues of formal English.
Not always! In informal writing, exclamation marks can also express excitement, emphasis, or strong emotion. In text-based communication where tone can be unclear, exclamation marks help convey enthusiasm or urgency.
It means can u kiss me soon
Punctuate means to insert figures like comma, period, exclamation marks etc. in a sentence.
Fiddlesticks!
Toma means to take (as in "take medicine," or just to take an object) or to drink (a liquid, not necessarily alcohol). no it means take as in take a dose of something If you use it with exclamation marks i.e. ¡Toma! It means "Take that!" or even, "COOL!"
"Β‘Hasta pronto!" is an exclamation in Spanish, meaning "See you soon!" It is commonly used to say goodbye in a friendly and informal way.
It means an expression of surprise, pain or anger, etc and is denoted in print with this mark: ! Often people say or write 'exclamation' when they mean 'exclamation mark'.
!That is what an exclamation mark is. You use it at the end of an emphatic sentence or after an interjection.Get your butts in this house right now!Hey! Don't walk away from me while I'm talking to you!
It means an expression of surprise, pain or anger, etc and is denoted in print with this mark: ! Often people say or write 'exclamation' when they mean 'exclamation mark'.
it means your handbrake is on
This is relevant, for example, when selecting sentences with Ctrl-click. It seems that Word basically detects the end of a sentence by periods, question marks, exclamation marks, or end-of-paragraph marks (i.e., "enter" was pressed). This means that sometimes the sentences are selected incorrectly; for example, when an abbreviation ends with a period, Word incorrectly detects the end of a sentence.
In computer programming, the exclamation markcorresponds to ASCII character 33 (21 in hexadecimal).
When you chide someone, it means you are yelling at them or scolding them.