of course.
Yes, a sentence with quotation marks can also have commas. For example: "She said, 'I'll be there at 5 p.m.,' but she didn't arrive until 6 p.m." In this sentence, the commas are used within the quotation marks to set off the quoted speech.
inverted commas
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
Inverted commas, also known as quotation marks, are punctuation marks used to indicate spoken or quoted language in writing. They come in pairs, with the opening quotation mark ("") at the beginning of the quoted text and the closing quotation mark ("") at the end.
Inverted commas, also known as quotation marks, are punctuation marks used to indicate direct speech or a quotation in writing. They are placed at the beginning and end of the quoted text to show that the words inside the marks are from another source.
In writing dialog, use quotation marks to indicate the spoken words by a character. Commas separate the spoken words from the rest of the sentence, and end the spoken words inside the closing quotation mark. Punctuation that is part of the spoken words (like commas, question marks, or exclamation points) should be placed within the quotation marks.
With NO exceptions, periods and commas go INSIDE the quotation marks. However, question marks (if the question comes at the end of the sentence) are put following the clause with the quotation marks outside the question mark. If there are two clauses within the sentence separated by a conjunction, and there is a semi colon required, the semi colon at the end of the first clause goes outside the quotation marks.
after the quotation marks because if put before the quotation mark, that makes the quote seem like if it continues after what you wrote even if the quote has ended. period marks go before the quotation mark because that is ending a sentence... period.
Errm... Inverted commas?
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
British style places commas and periods that are not part of the quoted material outside of the quotation marks. Also, in technical applications or when discussing coding, punctuation that is not part of a text string should be placed outside of the quotes. Placing commas and periods inside the quotes implies that they are part of the string to be displayed.
The comma is inside the quotation mark if it is part of the quote. For example: John said, "Please pass the butter, and then could you pour me some milk?" Notice that there is also a comma after the word "said" that is not in quotation marks. This is because "said" is not a part of the quote. Be careful of indirect quotes which do not use quotation marks, such as: John said to please pass the butter and then pour him some milk. An easy mistake is to write: John said "to please pass the butter and then pour him some milk" which would be incorrect since that is not what John said.
You do punctuate 3 or more consecutive direct quotes with quotation marks AND commas. I am an English scholar, so believe me when I say this! LMJ
traditional puncutation is stuff like periods [.] commas [,] question marks [?] and quotation marks ["]
In which sentence are quotation marks used incorrectly? Ans: Sentence 10
In dialogue, periods, commas, question marks, and exclamation points go inside quotation marks. (A semicolon goes outside quotation marks but isn't used much in dialogue, so you don't need to worry about it.)
Titles of poems should be put in inverted commas (quotation marks).
I can't think of a relevant quotation. This sentence should not be bracketed by quotation marks.