Yes, if your using a quote from her you do use quotation marks. Like this-I'll quote you. The question was "Do you put quotation marks in front of the word she told me?"
The phrase she told me is what in language we refer to a dialogue tag. It is introductory to a quote. For instance, in the example below:
She told me, "You are wasting your time waiting for Bob to propose to you."
Dialogue tags need not precede the quote. They can appear between any clauses in the quoted sentence. For instance:
"You," She told me, "are wasting your time waiting for Bob to propose to you."
"You are wasting your time," She told me,"waiting for Bob to propose to you."
"You are wasting your time waiting for Bob,"She told me, "to propose to you."
"You are wasting your time waiting for Bob to propose," She told me, "to you."
You'll notice that each placement of the dialogue tag tends to emphasize a different part of the quoted sentence, and can become awkward.
Please get rid of the stinkbugs! She told the exterminator. Do you need to rid your mailbox of junkmail? Don't rid the house of that, she said.
No, it is a noun. Obviously it derives from a verb, so it's called a verbal noun or gerund. You can tell it's a noun because you can put 'the' in front of it. 'The waiting for news was very trying.'
The noun 'word' is a concrete noun as a word for written or spoken units of language; a word for a physical thing.The noun 'word' is an abstract noun as a word for a promise or assurance; a word for a command, news, or advice; a word for a concept.
No, console is not a compound word.
The word 'independence' is an abstract noun, a word for a concept.
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.
Quotation marks are put around the spoken words in a dialogue.
quotation marks
two quotation marks
No, quotation marks are not needed around individual letters when they are used as part of a word or sentence in standard writing. Quotation marks are typically used to indicate a direct quotation or to highlight a specific phrase in writing.
The word "babushka" may be in quotation marks to indicate that it is being referenced as a term or word itself, rather than to describe an actual babushka, which is a type of headscarf worn by women in Eastern Europe.
A direct quotation is indicated by the use of quotation marks. It looks like this: the other day, Fred told me "I am tired of working for the company". If I did not wish to quote Fred, but merely wanted to paraphrase him, I could say, the other day Fred told me that he didn't want to continue working for the company.
The likely word is quotation (a notable quote),also used for the punctuation "quotation marks" (" ").
Errm... Inverted commas?
Using double quotation marks to emphasize a word or phrase unnecessarily. Quoting without attribution or a clear indication of the original source. Failing to properly punctuate the quoted text within the quotation marks. Mixing single and double quotation marks in the same sentence.
You can start a sentence with one quotation mark that is the first of a pair of quotation marks, but there must be additional text between the first and second quotation marks.A sentence can begin with a quotation: "Maybe," she said.A sentence can also consist of only a quotation: "Don't look down."A sentence can begin with a word or phrase in quotation marks that is not a quotation: "Off-label" use of the drug has increased in the past year.