Black Hole
May contain traces of nut
You need a particular thread for that to be the proper way.
Not really. Use aUse a hammer for putting screws in, and a screwdriver for taking them out is the proper way.
I thought as former colonies that was exactly what it was... they were not constantly looking for approval.
Obviously it indicates a question, but then the reader has to find a question within the sentence instead of having to guess what the question might be. There is a rash of posts on this forum and others that say something like (I paraphrase):Does not a question mark indicate a question then?
But it can be used to indicate some uncertainty in the validity of the statement being made?Putting a question mark at the end of a sentence (that would otherwise read as a statement) is not sufficient to turn the sentence into a question!
I have scraps of paper all over the place with question marks at the end of statements for exactly that reason. Not sure that I would use them in a more formal environment?But it can be used to indicate some uncertainty in the validity of the statement being made?
Shirley that should have been - ¿Por qué?Why?
If it's the only name for it, how can it be an Americanism? I presume you mean the interrobang; I have it available on the iPad: ‽︎It didn't quite make it into ascii, but it is in unicode,
BTW
I couldn't bring myself to use it's name as I'm not keen on Americanisms