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exclamation mark

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exclamation mark

Punctuation mark (!) used to indicate emphasis or strong emotion (‘That's terrible!’). It is appropriate after interjections (‘Rats!’), emphatic greetings (‘Hi!’), and orders (‘Shut up!’), as well as those sentences beginning How or What that are not questions (‘How embarrassing!’, ‘What a surprise!’).

The exclamation mark is most often seen in direct speech. Its use is kept to a minimum in narrative prose and technical writing.

Within a quotation an exclamation mark may be placed in square brackets to indicate that the writer or editor is surprised by something.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Luciano Pavarotti, Italy's greatest living cultural icon, put an exclamation mark on the Turin Olympics' opening ceremony with an orchestrally backed rendition of Puccini's Nessun Dorma on Friday night.
With them in hand as a willing anchor tenant, she then approached Douglas Durst and initiated the development of landmark office building 4 Times Square, a tower that put an exclamation mark on Times Square's amazing revitalization.
Truss gives easy to understand instructions as to where and when and how to use such wonderful marks as apostrophes, commas, dashes, colons, semicolons, exclamation marks, ellipses, parentheses, brackets, and more.
 
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