English, asked by amansharma5959, 11 months ago

What is the main point of ""Interrobang""?

Answers

Answered by Pɪᴋᴀᴄʜᴜɢɪʀʟ
4

Explanation:

Interrobang and interabang. An interrobang is a punctuation mark that consists of an exclamation point and a question mark superimposed on top of one another. An interrobang is a non-standard punctuation mark meant to signify a sentence that is a question as well as an exclamation.

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Answered by JyotismitaMajhi
1

Answer:

An interrobang is a punctuation mark that consists of an exclamation point and a question mark superimposed on top of one another. An interrobang is a non-standard punctuation mark meant to signify a sentence that is a question as well as an exclamation. The interrobang is the invention of Martin Speckter who owned an advertising agency. Speckter suggested adoption of the interrobang in 1962 to replace the use of the question mark in conjunction with the exclamation point in advertising copy. The interrobang was included in Americana typeface by the American Type Founders in 1966, and Remington Rand added the interrobang as an optional key in 1968. By the 1970s enthusiasm for the new punctuation mark ebbed and the interrobang is almost never seen, today. Interestingly, the interrobang is still found in the Unicode set. The word interrobang, originally spelled as interabang, comes from the combination of interrogative or question mark and bang, which is printers’ slang for the exclamation point.

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