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Hello Cadzao,
How are you?
This looks like a question, but it is not intended as one. It's intended as an exclamation. Think of it as the exclamation "What questions this will . . . has . . . laid before us!", but with an unusual, literary
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Hello Cadzao,
How are you?
This looks like a question, but it is not intended as one. It's intended as an exclamation. Really, it's a rhetorical question, used only to draw attention to the questions that have been 'laid before us'. Strictly
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In reverse order, "Please give our love to your family" means, roughly, "please tell your family that I am thinking of them with affection."
It's a rather ordinary thing to say - it doesn't have the excitement, surprise, anger, horror, or
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what do you mean by ordinary and calam to be typical exclamations ? what do the exclamation marks mean in the sentences ?
what does "Please give our love to your family " means ? best wishes ?
thanks
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Hi,
I would like to know how would people interpret the exclamation mark in the sentence : " Please give our love to your folks ! hope your dad is doing well and still doing his stuff !
An exclamation is something that is said suddenly and
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Hi,
I would like to know how would people interpret the exclamation mark in the sentence : " Please give our love to your folks ! hope your dad is doing well and still doing his stuff !
thanks
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Yoong Liat wrote: Thecandymancan wrote: When you end a sentence with a quote that quotes a quote, does the single quote (') go first or last?
e.g. "He said, 'She is sexy.'" ( In BrE, this would be the correct punctuation.)
I have seen
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No never, never, use that word!!! DON'T FORGET IT!!!
BOOBU
<edited to remove about 14 instances of the word "never" and about 120 exclamation marks.>
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Anonymous wrote: Would it be, "I was a contestant on "Who Wants to be a Millionare?".
I'm asking if the period following the sentence is nessacary in both AP and "universally accepted" style.
Thanks. This is correct. Firstly, it is
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Hi,
Since it is just one word, I'd simply call it an exclamation, and I'd write it with an exclamation mark, ie 'Really! '.
Clive
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