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The word "I" is always capitalised. Sentences begin with a capital letter and end with a period (or question mark or exclamation mark).
Some of the commas I've suggested are not mandatory. I just feel they help make the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
110 days ago
Capital Letters, Commas, Punctuation, Question Marks, Exclamation Marks, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Colours, Friendships, Friends, Languages, Refinancing
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It's usually used with an exclamation mark: !
It means...this/that is a good deal.
Personally, I would like this construction to fall into complete disuse in English.
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Here is the rule in American English: (different sources are consistent on this rule, and I suspect British English has the same rule.) When both the whole sentence and the unit enclosed in quotation marks are questions or exclamations, the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
alpheccastars
249 days ago
American English, British English, Punctuation, Quotation Marks, Exclamation Marks, Sentences, Animals, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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Hi Chipper, and welcome to English Forums.
Your replacement was fine, but I bet no one would have noticed the "the"s in the original. Unlike exclamation marks! Which tend to draw the reader's notice!!
You could have recast the
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Hi, We have but skimmed the surface. eg this is from http://www.writtensound.com/laughter.htm Clive Laughter When you try and write the sound of a person laughing, the standard "haha!" does not always capture the true sound and meaning.
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ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
291 days ago
Punctuation, Exclamation Marks, Animals, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Asia, American, Tips, Acronyms, Languages, New Zealand
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"DE781" (Email Removed) schrieb im Newsbeitrag At least he didn't make us change the way we pronounce the vowels in"banana" (Br: "bahhhnarrrnarrr") in order to sound "more French" (WTF??), withthreats of
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I've wondered whether, when referring to the product and ? French Yahoo! is written without a space by the French Yahoo! people on the French Yahoo! site http://fr.yahoo.com/. I would ... to think of the exclamation mark as just a character,
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I've wondered whether, when referring to the product in French, one must put a ... So if I were to write those about those in French, would they be and ? French Yahoo! is written without a space by the French Yahoo! people on the French Yahoo!
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Does the US, like the UK, market have a product ingeniously named "I can't believe it's not butter!"? Yes. Check with Mpls Ray Wise he has an encyclopaedic knowledge of matters margarine and related. Me, I have enough trouble
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