[Excerpt from the 16th Edition of the Chicago Manual of Style]
"Sentences that include an e-mail address or a uniform resource identifier such as a URL should bepunctuated normally. Though angle brackets or other "wrappers" are standard in some applications,
these are generally unnecessary in normal prose (see 6.102). Readers of print sources should assume
that any punctuation at the end of an e-mail address or URL belongs to the sentence..."
Yes. If the sentence is a complete sentence and the URL is at the end of sentence, you put a period at the end just like any other sentence.
You put a period at the end of the sentence to indicate that the sentence has ended.
An additional period is not necessary at the end of a sentence that ends in the word "inc."
Terminate means to end or stop something. A period at the end of a sentence terminates the sentence.
500
Yes you do.
Yes!
A period goes at the end of a sentence to signal its completion.
A period is a punctuation mark used to end a sentence. It indicates a full stop and tells the reader that the sentence has ended.
At the end of this sentence we had to put a period.
No, you do not add another period after "Jr." at the end of a sentence. The period after "Jr." serves as both an abbreviation marker and as the end of the sentence.
There is a period at the end of the sentence.
Yes, if the ellipsis falls at the end of a sentence, you should use a period after it to indicate the end of the sentence.
When a full stop appears.
You put a period at the end of the sentence to indicate that the sentence has ended.
So you puR period after a website link if at end of sentence
If a sentence ends with a.m. or p.m., there is no need for an additional period after the period that is already part of the abbreviation. The period at the end of a.m. or p.m. serves as the ending punctuation for the sentence.
If the sentence is a statement it has to end in a period. If it is a question it would end in a question mark (?) and if the sentence indicates stong feeling it would end in an exclamation mark (!)