Punctuation Marks & Written Accents
Punctuation Marks & Written Accents In Spanish, upside-down punctuation marks, such as ¿ and ¡ are placed at the beginning of a phrase to signal a question or an exclamation. These are used along with those that come at the end of phrases, sentences or questions. ¡Hasta luego! ¿Cómo se llama ella?
Punctuation Marks & Written Accents In Spanish, some words have written accent marks. An accent mark is a tilted line placed over a vowel. Putting accent marks over vowels is part of spelling words correctly. When learning new words, memorize where the accent marks are. ¡Adiós! ¿Cuál?
Punctuation Marks & Written Accents The wavy line in the letter ñ is called a tilde. The ñ is pronounced similar to the ny in the word canyon. Señor Compañera
It is not necessary to memorize accent marks when learning new words. True False
What should the punctuation of a exclamation look like? [Default] [MC Any] [MC All]
What is the ~ called over the letter ñ? accent tilde wavy line [Default] [MC Any] [MC All]
Accent marks are part of the correct spelling of a word. True False
What should the punctuation of a question look like? [Default] [MC Any] [MC All]
A written accent mark can change the meaning of a word. True False
The ~ over the letter ñ changes the pronunciation of “n” to sound like: my ny