Where do you put quotation marks in a sentence?

Where do you put quotation marks in a sentence?

Commas and periods always go inside the quotation marks in American English; dashes, colons, and semicolons almost always go outside the quotation marks; question marks and exclamation marks sometimes go inside, sometimes stay outside.

What do single quotation marks mean?

Single quotation marks are used to mark a quote within a quote or a direct quote in a news story headline. Periods always go inside all quotation marks. A question mark is only placed inside of single quotation marks if the quote within a quote is a question. The same is true for exclamation marks.

What is the difference between single and double quotation marks?

If you are an American, using quotation marks could hardly be simpler: Use double quotation marks at all times unless quoting something within a quotation, when you use single. It’s different in the greater Anglosphere, where they generally use singles in books and doubles in newspapers.

What is the sign of quotation mark?

The symbol used at the beginning of the quotation (“opening quotation mark”) is usually “ (“open inverted commas”) or ‘ (“open inverted comma”), and the symbol at the end (“closing quotation mark”) is ” (“close inverted commas”) or ‘ (“close inverted comma”).

Do commas go inside scare quotes?

Some people feel the newspaper is just a bunch of argle-bargle (meaningless talk). A common error in grammar is a comma splice (using a comma when it should be a period). If it’s a foreign term or a term you feel requires emphasis to indicate its unfamiliarity, italicize it. Scare quotes may send the wrong message.

When should you put a word in quotes?

Quotation marks around single words can occasionally be used for emphasis, but only when quoting a word or term someone else used. Usually, this implies that the author doesn’t agree with the use of the term.