No, it is not necessary to put a full stop after "Dr." unless it is followed by a sentence.
A full stop is used to indicate the end of a sentence. For example, "The cat is sleeping." It is also used after an abbreviation, like "Dr." for Doctor.
Traditionally, a full stop (also known as a period in the US) follows an abbreviation. However, where UK English is employed, such as the UK, Australia and New Zealand, placing any punctuation after an abbreviation is outmoded, and no longer required. For example, a word such as Dr or Mr has no full stop after it in Australia, but in the US it is still written as Dr. or Mr.
No, you do not capitalize the words "full stop sign." It is typically written in lowercase as "full stop sign."
Yes, it is common practice to use a full stop (period) at the end of a sentence or short phrase to indicate its completion. This helps clarify the boundaries between different thoughts or ideas.
A period at the end of a sentence is also known as a full stop.
no
no
No, you do not need to use a full stop in an address unless it is at the end of a sentence. When writing out an address, use commas between the different parts of the address (e.g., street, city, state).
If the full stop is at the end of the initials then there should be a space before the next word.
The short form of "mister" with a full stop is "Mr.". This abbreviation is commonly used before a man's last name to denote respect or formality.
If it is at the end of a sentence then yes however if not then no
full stop, it is only reasonable because whenever you end a sentence you put a full stop roughly 97% of the time
A full stop is typically placed at the end of a complete sentence to indicate a pause or the end of a thought. It is also used after abbreviations like Mr., Dr., or in decimal numbers.
No, typically a full stop is not used after a heading in formatting texts. Headings are meant to be brief and act as signposts for the content that follows.
depends. If I put the Quote "you do not have a pig" and the I want to keep going i would put,"You do not have a pig." but If you don't want to keep going yo would put the period after the quotation mark.
No you do not. Info. is an abbreviation and therefore requires a full stop
Yes, in American English, the general convention is to place the period inside the closing quotation marks. For example: "Hello." In British English, the period is placed outside the closing quotation marks unless it is part of the quoted material.