no
If the full stop is at the end of the initials then there should be a space before the next word.
No, it is not necessary to put a full stop after "Dr." unless it is followed by a sentence.
no
Do a full stop. Then write in your answer. on the screen it will be coming up with vetty, please answer: or vetty please answer the following:. when you have done your answer, do a full stop. carry on the sentence so that it is vetty, please answer: or vetty, please answer the following: but you must not use capitals, put the space before the comma, or not use a colon. when you have put in a colon (:) it will go onto question. type in question and put in question mark(?).
It is a mathematical concept which looks like a full stop. It has a position (in space) but has no dimensions - that is, it has no length or width (unlike a full stop - look through a microscope).
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
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
You ALWAYS use a fullstop, unless you are ending the sentence with another punctuation mark. If the sentence is a question, then you'd end the sentence with a question mark. You would not add a full stop after the question mark. eg. How many minutes are there in an hour? If you use an exclamation mark, then you do not add a full stop. eg. Watch out!
... from the atmosphere.... from the atmosphere.... from the atmosphere.... from the atmosphere.