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My, aren't you getting demanding. "Check My Answers!" - with an exclamation mark, no less.
2 and 6 are wrong. EDIT: oops 3, not 2. Sorry.
Don't expect more help unless you can remember some courtesy.
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Hello all, I have a question that is not addressed in any section that I've perused so far, here or elsewhere. I know that punctuation normally goes outside of the parentheses (like this). (However, if the entire sentence goes inside, then
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Hi Ray,
Thanks for your help, however, I was wondering if there should be a comma when you have the title of a play (or book, or movie, etc.) with punctuation (like a question mark of exclamation mark) as part of the actual title. If I wanted
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My colleague and I have been wondering about this for a while...If you're referring to a title with a question mark or exclamation mark, which typically requires quotation marks around it, should you use a comma along with exclamation mark and
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Forgotten where this came from. I 76 Things not to do When Writing a Screenplay 1. Don't put your name, address and phone number on the title page. 2. Don't do your homework when choosing a title. 3. Add subtitles below the
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
mc
1 yr 238 days ago
Metaphors, Punctuation, Mistakes, Conversational, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Colours, Writing, Arts, Sentences, Capital Letters, Exclamation Marks, Music, Numbers
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Hello, I want to know that after Exclamation mark , the sentence should start with a capital letter. Example. 1. Oh no! S he is in danger. or 2. Oh no! she is in danger Thanks.
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You did a good job on this.
I would make only a couple changes, and a few are open to interpretation.
1) If he said it kindly, and didn't shout, then use a comma, not an exclamation mark, which would indicate that he's shouting.
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The first is a rhetorical question, a comment on how a child has grown since you last saw her/him. It is not expecting an answer. The second is a straight question and should have a question mark, not an exclamation mark. It is merely asking for
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Brunces wrote: Doubt #2 Sometimes, I see periods which contain direct speech within quotes. For example: The father arrived home and said , "Honey, I'm here!" and then dropped his briefcase on the couch. 1) Is the writing this period correct?
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Hello, friends. Please, which is the correct way and why? Doubt #1 "color of the car" x "car color" x "car's color" "leg of the cat" x "cat leg" x "cat's leg" "pizza of yesterday" x "yesterday pizza" x "yesterday's pizza" I've heard that Genitive
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