Section 1 The Exclamation Point Pages 13-14 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 5
About This Presentation
Title:

Section 1 The Exclamation Point Pages 13-14

Description:

OST164 Text Editing Applications Section 1 The Exclamation Point Pages 13-14 The Exclamation Point - 119 The exclamation point is an emotional mark of punctuation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:39
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 6
Provided by: Glend161
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Section 1 The Exclamation Point Pages 13-14


1
Section 1The Exclamation PointPages 13-14
OST164 Text Editing Applications
2
The Exclamation Point - 119
  • The exclamation point is an emotional mark of
    punctuation that is most often found in sales and
    advertising copy. Avoid using it wherever
    possible.

3
The Exclamation Point - 119 a
  • Use an exclamation point at the end of a sentence
    to indicate enthusiasm, surprise, disbelief,
    urgency, or strong feelings. Leave only 1 space
    between it and the next sentence.
  • Yes! Were selling our entire inventory below
    costs!
  • Doors open at 9 a.m.! Lets roll!
  • No! I dont believe that!
  • When I told Sid what had happened, all he said
    was, Youve got to be kidding!

4
The Exclamation Point - 119 b-c
  • An exclamation point may be used in place of a
    question mark to express strong feeling.
  • How could you do that!
  • What made you think Id welcome a call at 230
    a.m.!
  • What did I tell you!

The exclamation point may be enclosed in
parentheses and place directly after a word that
the writer wants to emphasize. We won
exclusive(!) distribution rights in the Western
Hemisphere.
5
The Exclamation Point - 120
  • (a) A single word may be followed by an
    exclamation point to express intense feelings.
    The sentence that follows it is capitalized and
    punctuated as usual. Wow! What a great job.
  • (b) When a word is repeated for emphasis, an
    exclamation point should follow each repetition.
    Going! Going! Our bargains are gone!
  • (c) When exclamations are mild, a comma or a
    period is sufficient. Well, well, things
    could be worse.
  • No. I wont accept those conditions.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com