Cite is a verb. It means to quote from a scholarly source (and give the source reference). Thus it can be used in the following possible sentences:
to cite - to quote or give as an example
Cite the reasons in paragraphs 5-7.
A policeman will cite you for driving unsafely.
well a bibliography is a list of things that you use when doing research
Please put quotation marks around what the characters said.
A meritorious citation is a good thing; a traffic citation is not.
This reference would be complete with a citation.
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
use it by saying- how can you use the word ebullient in a sentence?
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
A preposition.
You can use the word feces in a sentence to mean excrement.
I can't think of a relevant quotation. This sentence should not be bracketed by quotation marks.
You can start a sentence with one quotation mark that is the first of a pair of quotation marks, but there must be additional text between the first and second quotation marks.A sentence can begin with a quotation: "Maybe," she said.A sentence can also consist of only a quotation: "Don't look down."A sentence can begin with a word or phrase in quotation marks that is not a quotation: "Off-label" use of the drug has increased in the past year.
The first word in a sentence, in a direct quotation, and in a line of poetry is capitalized.
when you put a quotation in a sentence you use quotation marks for the quote
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
when you put a quotation in a sentence you use quotation marks for the quote
No, the word after the end of a quotation is not capitalized unless it is a proper noun or the first word of a new sentence.
...a complete sentence on its own. If the direct quotation is integrated into the sentence and not a standalone sentence, then the first letter does not need to be capitalized.
at the end of a sentence
Not necessarily, if it is the start of a sentence or if it is a word that is usually capitalised, you would. But if it is a quote and you start say in the middle of the sentence then you don't.
To show that a person is speaking.
This sentence is an indirect quotation - James said that he is a garbologist. An indirect quotation, sometimes called indirect speech or reported speech, reports someone's words without quoting word for word eg A direct quotation or direct speech gives the exact words of a speaker or writer, with quotation marks: James said " I am a garbologist".