To cry out suddenly or vehemently, as from surprise or emotion:e.g The children exclaimed with excitement.
The prefix for "exclaimed" is "ex-". In this case, "ex-" means out, beyond, or completely. When added to the base word "claimed," it changes the meaning to express loudly or vehemently.
Excalibur is a much better word than exclaimed, in my opinion.
"What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
ex
I am only 9 but I would probably put exclaimed into a sentence like..."Come back!" my mum exclaimed, as I had just ran off throwing her underwear at the neighbour's!well something like that!=D
of Exclaim
The sentence "Silence disappears when you say it," exclaimed Wilma should have a comma before "exclaimed" and the first letter of "exclaimed" should be lowercase.
"Our house is on fire!" the boy exclaimed.
mark exclaimed we certainly have correct
The story goes Archamedes , when he discovered the weight of the crown, ran on the streets of Athens naked shouting EUREKA EUREKA. meaning I have found it.
Excalibur is a much better word than exclaimed, in my opinion.
"What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
The teacher exclaimed, "I'll have to postpone the exam until next week." "Everyone will be in their sleeping bags by ten each night," exclaimed the camp director.
The sentence should be punctuated as: "What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
ex
No! It is not a narcotic I exclaimed!
The sentence would be: "You won!" exclaimed Georgianna?