Yes, you indent each new paragraph.
No.
To indent a direct quote in a document, you can use the tab key to create a space at the beginning of the quote, or set the quote apart by applying formatting such as block quotes or italics to distinguish it from the rest of the text.
A space when beginning to write an essay.
Yes, typically you should indent the first line of a paragraph after a block quotation. However, formatting rules can vary depending on the style guide being followed (e.g., APA, MLA, Chicago).
Usually the whole quotation is in a block of text that is indented. If you are using a word processing program like Word, you probably have an indent key that will indent all selected text. (You shouldn't try to indent each line because the word wrap feature will throw it off.)
There's no right way to write a quote. Whatever you say is a quote from you. Your question "How do you write a quote?" is a quote from you. Just talk and speak what's on your mind.
No, you have to indent. no matter wat
The way I've done it and have usually seen it done is using a hanging indent and making the quote its own paragraph.
For quotations of more than 40 words in APA style, you need to format the quote as a block quotation. Start the quote on a new line, indent the entire quote 0.5 inches from the left margin, and do not use quotation marks. The entire block quote should be double-spaced, and a citation should be placed after the final punctuation mark.
About what quote? Write it here.
You would write one just like you would write a letter to someone. Indent, correct grammar, and everything like that :]