exclamation
71exclamation marks — are used to show strong emotion ( Get out! ) or urgency ( Help me! ). They should almost never be used for giving emphasis to a simple statement of fact: It was bound to happen sometime! A bull got into a china shop here (cited by Bernstein) …
72exclamation of contempt — cry of scorn …
73exclamation point — punctuation mark (!) used at the end of a sentance to indicate strong feeling or to emphasize that which was stated …
74exclamation mark — (!) Used in taxonomic literature to signify that a particular herbarium specimen has been examined by the author. Cf. non visus (n.v.) …
75exclamation mark — Kiko pū iwa, kiko ho ōho …
76Point d'exclamation — v · d · m …
77Point d’exclamation — Point d exclamation ¡ ! Ponctuation Accolades ( { } ) · Parenthèses ( ( ) )  Chevrons ( < > ) · Crochets ( [ ] )  Guillemets ( « » ou… …
78Inverted question and exclamation marks — The inverted question and exclamation marks are used to begin interrogative and exclamatory sentences respectively, in written Spanish. And formelly, in written Old Portuguese Usage The inverted question mark (¿) is a punctuation mark indicating… …
79Virgule d'exclamation — v · d · m Ponctuation …
80spontaneous exclamation — n: spontaneous declaration at declaration 2c Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …