An exclamation is an act of exclaiming, out crying or loud complaining in protest. Some examples of exclamations are, "Look!" "Now!" and, "Why would you do that!"
I guess you could say that.like you could say "WOW!!!!!" or you could aslo say "AWSOME!!" but dependes how you really look at it..
"Between" an exclamation mark? Exclamation marks do not change the normal rules of capitalization.
Why can be used in many exclamation areas. One such is, Why did you do this work? Why!
Well generally speaking an Exclamation is to imply excitement, commonly used at the end of a sentence. The only use I can think of in a sentence would be something like: "The person used an exclamation at the end of their sentence" or "They they said with exclamation". A more common use would be to say someone "Exclaimed" something Example: "It's very windy outside Mr H. Exclaimed" Hope this is of some help..
It can indicate excitment, anger, or some sort of exclamation. It depends on the context of the conversation.
Predict this, scientist!
"Jump!" is an exclamation.
An exclamation is an act of exclaiming, out crying or loud complaining in protest. Some examples of exclamations are, "Look!" "Now!" and, "Why would you do that!"
Wow! Is an exclamation just like Ouch! Exclamations are words. Golly!
Some words that rhyme with PowerPoint are flowerpot, afterthought, and fought.
There are two separate versions of the exclamation. "Ooh" as an exclamation is generally the same as the colloquial "Ooo" which now dominates. Both have a single long OO sound (also used for some long U words) as in two, cool, and moon.The distinction is that "ooh" can also be a verb (oohed and aahed, oohing) while "ooo" is just an exclamation.
I assume you mean an exclamation mark. (!) It stands for emphasis and indicates that the words it follows are said with strong feeling. e.g. "Good Grief!" "Thats amazing!"
It might show that you are not afraid to be loud,or in outher words not afraid to be you
proclaim, proclamation acclaim, acclamation exclaim, exclamation explain, explanation
in sentences there can be an exclamation mark in it!
It is not proper Italian, but it can be interpreted as a dialectal/slang exclamation, where marone means Madonna (the Virgin Mary) in some Italian regions (especially the Naples/Campania region). It is similar to the "Jesus!" exclamation in English.