No
The Style Guide says that you should use a double quotation mark in front of a quote. Example: He said, "Hello, Pam."
Yes you need to use quotation marks when writing down what someone new says.
In American English, an exclamation point should be placed inside quotation marks, followed by a comma if necessary: He shouted, "Stop!" In British English, the exclamation point would be placed outside of the quotation marks: He shouted, "Stop"!
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.
If it says Missing before statement line 2 file Code you just need to include ; before the statement.
In the quotation 'To thine own self be true' thine is used for the word 'your'. It says 'Be true to yourself'.
You did, right there. Shakespeare didn't. In fact, this is not a quotation attributed to anyone.
no you need a comma before the open quotations and I'm not sure what you mean be footnote, but you probably don't need a period at the end of your sentence
she nees to get to know you better
Quotation marks should be used if the passage says "Bob thought" or something similar. In this case, the quotation marks are used in the same way they would be used if the passage said "Bob said"
The Nurse doesn't say anything that resembles this. Please check your quotation.
To mark a Pokemon, you need to put it in a PC. Then select the MOVE command. Put the cursor over the Pokemon you want to mark, and press A. A list of commands will come up. Select the one that says MARK. Then you can choose from 4 symbols and order them up any way you like, or have multiples of one kind.