Full stops are usually placed inside quotation marks. For example, "She said it was orange."
.?! --------------------- the coma , the full stop . the query ? the colon : the semicolon ; the apostrophe ' the quotation mark " the exclamation mark !
You ALWAYS use a fullstop, unless you are ending the sentence with another punctuation mark. If the sentence is a question, then you'd end the sentence with a question mark. You would not add a full stop after the question mark. eg. How many minutes are there in an hour? If you use an exclamation mark, then you do not add a full stop. eg. Watch out!
full stop
Inside the quotation marks, if the question mark is a part of the title, as in: Is this song "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" Otherwise, outside, as in: Can we stop listening to "The Wheels on the Bus"? Looks strange, but it's the truth.
Either use a full stop "." or an exclamation mark "!", depending on the forcefulness of the command.
.?!" full stop,question mark,exclamation mark,quotation marks.
.?! --------------------- the coma , the full stop . the query ? the colon : the semicolon ; the apostrophe ' the quotation mark " the exclamation mark !
In American English, the full stop typically goes inside the quotation marks. In British English, it can go either inside or outside depending on the style guide being followed.
. full stop (International) | period (American), comma? question mark,! exclamation mark: colon; semicolon- hyphen- dash( and ) parenthesis[ and ] brackets… ellipsis' apostrophe," and " quotation marks/ virgule or slash{ and } braces or curly brackets
. full stop (International) | period (American), comma? question mark,! exclamation mark: colon; semicolon- hyphen- dash( and ) parenthesis[ and ] brackets… ellipsis' apostrophe," and " quotation marks/ virgule or slash{ and } braces or curly brackets
Comma, period, question mark, exclamation point, colon, semicolon.
No, you do not. A question mark or exclamation point replaces a full stop. ********************************* The answer above is correct. An exclamation or question mark replaces the full stop and signals the end of the sentence! ********************************* I respectfully point out that is does matter...the question mark and the exclamation mark come first, followed by the full stop. For example, the following words with punctuation are presented in this way..."What child is this?". Without the full stop you would be not aware that the sentence was concluded.
You ALWAYS use a fullstop, unless you are ending the sentence with another punctuation mark. If the sentence is a question, then you'd end the sentence with a question mark. You would not add a full stop after the question mark. eg. How many minutes are there in an hour? If you use an exclamation mark, then you do not add a full stop. eg. Watch out!
. full stop (International) | period (American), comma? question mark,! exclamation mark: colon; semicolon- hyphen- dash( and ) parenthesis[ and ] brackets… ellipsis' apostrophe," and " quotation marks/ virgule or slash{ and } braces or curly brackets
depends. If I put the Quote "you do not have a pig" and the I want to keep going i would put,"You do not have a pig." but If you don't want to keep going yo would put the period after the quotation mark.
No, you only need a question mark.
A full stop is something you put at the end of a sentence to mark that it is the end. They are useful for when you're reading text as it shows you where to pause before reading the next sentence. A full stop is marked by a single dot. They are also known as periods.