An upside down exclamation mark could be written as an "i".
EX: (exclamation mark)=!
(upside down exclamation mark)=i
The "upside down exclamation mark" is really the letter "I" but lower case.
you do a lowercase i
To do an upsidedown 'i', just do an exclamation mark. '!'.
Yes, upside-down exclamation marks (¡) are used in Portuguese. They are used at the beginning of exclamatory sentences to indicate the tone of the sentence.
upside horseshoe on the car
It is sapnish. when you write an exclamation u do this: I'm hungry! goes to ¡ten go hambres!
The inverted exclamation point can be entered by holding down the Alt key and pressing 0161, 173 or 8877 on the number pad. In Microsoft Word, the inverted question and exclamation marks can be typed by holding down the Ctrl, Alt, and shift keys while typing a normal question or exclamation mark, or by typing either mark at the start of the sentence whilst in the Spanish language mode.
You might be talking about that funny punctuation mark in Spanish. If a sentence ended with an exclamation mark in English and you wanted to translate that in Spanish, you would always have to put the upside down exclamation mark first before you put down a capital letter.
One way is to do it via insert symbol but possibly the quickest is press and hold the alt key and type in 0191. OR In Microsoft Word 2007: Go to the Insert tab Click symbols and then "More symbols..." Find the exclamation mark You should see an option called "Shortcut Key...". Click it Under "New shortcut key..." press "Alt" and then press "1" Next time you need an upside down exclamation mark press "Alt" and "1" Your done!
low tire pressure if it is the upside down half circle, kinda like a U with an exclamation.
Yes, upside down exclamation marks (¡) are used in Portuguese at the beginning of exclamatory sentences to indicate strong emphasis. This punctuation mark is also used in other Romance languages such as Spanish.
You have a tire low on air.
it means your day time lights are on.