Technically you can:
"Why would you do that?" I asked.
when you put a quotation in a sentence you use quotation marks for the quote
when you put a quotation in a sentence you use quotation marks for the quote
A directly quoted sentence begins with quotation marks (" ").
Put a quotation mark at the beginning of the quote and at the end of the quote. You do not need to put quotation marks around each sentence within that quote.
The sentence with quotations is as following: The teacher asked: "What kind of books do you like to read?"
Quotations should go after the period at the end of the sentence when copying a sentence from a book.
It appers within a sentence that you write. Set off integrated quotations by using quotation marks, so the reader can differentiate between what you write and what you borrow.
Quotations should fit into sentences:contextually.grammatically.
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.
commas go after question marks
quotation marks (" ") are usually used to specify stuff or to show somebody's taking in a storybook
Block quotations typically start on a new line and are indented. Punctuation marks within the block quotation itself should be included as they appear in the original text, with no additional punctuation added solely for formatting purposes.