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Reason: None provided.

No.

The usage of excessive exclamation marks is well known to be discouraged in English. Nobody does it who uses much English because of the comically confusing effect it causes,

when read according to the punctuation.

Obviously you don't know about that, but it's a major part of being a native English speaker because of how easy the test is, when someone learns English.

You simply add exclamation marks to every other, or third sentence, then have them read the passage aloud. Usage of exclamation marks is associated with stressing last syllables to indicate the emphasis this punctuation invokes.

When their voices go up over and over, you say to them ''That's why we recommend you don't use many exclamation marks through passages you write."

This is a long-term facet of written English. Native English writers know about this: particularly if they're explaining writing English to someone.

Soz, don't know where you're from, it's not by someone who commonly communicates on a regular basis, with others are fluent in English.

Edited to explain with some empathy why I'd tell you that.

There are other things too, but this is among the very first of several glaring usage patterns that spell ''Not a highly fluent technical English writer.''

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

No.

The usage of excessive exclamation marks is well known to be discouraged in English. Nobody does it who uses much English because of the comically confusing effect it causes,

when read according to the punctuation.

Obviously you don't know about that, but it's a major part of being a native English speaker because of how easy the test is, when someone learns English.

You simply add exclamation marks to every other, or third sentence, then have them read the passage aloud. Usage of exclamation marks is associated with stressing last syllables to indicate the emphasis this punctuation invokes.

When their voices go up over and over, you say to them ''That's why we recommend you don't use many exclamation marks through passages you write."

This is a long-term facet of written English. Native English writers know about this: particularly if they're explaining writing English to someone.

Soz, don't know where you're from, it's not by someone who commonly communicates at the level of someone who communicates with others, on a regular basis, who are fluent in English.

Edited to explain with some empathy why I'd tell you that.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

No.

The usage of excessive exclamation marks is well known to be discouraged in English. Nobody does it who uses much English because of the comically confusing effect it causes when read according to the punctuation.

Obviously you don't know about that, but it's a major part of being a native English speaker because of how easy the test is, when someone learns English.

You simply add exclamation marks to every other, or third sentence, then have them read the passage aloud. Usage of exclamation marks is associated with stressing last syllables to indicate the emphasis this punctuation invokes.

When their voices go up over and over, you say to them ''That's why we recommend you don't use many exclamation marks through passages you write."

This is a long-term facet of written English. Native English writers know about this: particularly if they're explaining writing English to someone.

Soz, don't know where you're from, it's not by someone who commonly communicates at the level of someone who communicates with others, on a regular basis, who are fluent in English.

Edited to explain with some empathy why I'd tell you that.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

No. The usage of excessive exclamation marks is well known to be discouraged in English.

Whether anybody told you during your ''education'' or not.

2 years ago
1 score