Before the ending quotation mark.
"No!", is what my friend said when I asked him that question. (See?)
Yes, you can receive a free insurance quote from many companies. A phone call to the company with that specific question asked, will tell you whether or not a free quote is available.
I don't know I am the person who asked this question:( arceus789 here. i dont know her most famous quote, but here's a good one. "this train never went off track- and i never lost a passenger"
I don't know I am the person who asked this question:( arceus789 here. i dont know her most famous quote, but here's a good one. "this train never went off track- and i never lost a passenger"
It can work either way, depending upon what question you are aksing; I will illustrate. First example: Who was it who said "Give me liberty or give me death"? Pete Seeger once asked the question, "Where have all the flowers gone?" If the quote is a question it gets the question mark, but if the sentence is a question about a quote, then the question mark is outside of the quotation marks. English grammar is very logical (unlike English spelling).
a quote is something a person eg " you should live life large". And a reply is an answer to a question. hope that helps bye.
The quote "had he his hurts before" means that the person has experienced pain or struggles in the past. It implies that the individual has faced challenges and difficulties prior to the current situation. The quote suggests that the person may have built resilience or developed coping mechanisms from their previous experiences.
George Bush is noted for convoluted, grammatically incorrect pronouncements such as "Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning?", which he asked in Florence, South Carolina, on Jan. 11, 2000.
I asked one my self and He/she said quote "pretty good"
Only Rosa Parks could answer the question the way it is worded.
i have no idea what the answer is thats why your Quote says ASK US ANYTHING, so i asked you a question and you give me the complete opposite of wht i wanted as a amswer
I'm not sure exactly of your meaning but if you're writing a book and one of the characters asks a question, then you'd say something like John then asked, "Where does the train go from?" But if the charcacter is quoting someone else, then it would be Jim said that John had asked where the train went from.