If you're quoting something, you do. I'm not sure you're getting what "third person" means - it's when the story is told by a remote narrator and uses the pronouns he/she/it/they. You use quotations to denote dialogue or quoted phrases from another writer.
Yes, quotation marks are still used in third person when directly quoting someone's words or phrases in a sentence. This helps to differentiate the actual words being spoken by a character from the rest of the text.
The only time you use 3 quotations marks is if your quoting someone who quoted someone else. Then you set it up "' quote '".
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
You do always use quotation marks in written dialog. Also each person quoted should be in his own paragraph.
Never. You should always have quotation marks sorrounding a quote.
cite the source and use quotation marks
cite the source and use quotation marks
I use quotation marks. It's not a hard and fast rule.
"You put it around a quote" - QuestionsQuestions143 "You use quotation marks around what someone is saying." Said questionsquestions143 :]
Use single quotation marks to indicate a quote within a quote.If you're using a quote that contains a quote you'll need to surround the embedded quote with single quotation marks.
Yes, you can use a quote as a headline without quotation marks, but it's important to ensure that the attribution is clear to readers. The context and formatting of the quote within the headline should make it evident that it is a direct quotation.
No. Use quotation marks.
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.
Right here. You came to the right place.There is a video tutorial on how to use quotation marks below for you.