It depends. What is the sentence you want to use?
With NO exceptions, the comma and period should go BEFORE the closing quotation mark. Always.
after the quotation marks because if put before the quotation mark, that makes the quote seem like if it continues after what you wrote even if the quote has ended. period marks go before the quotation mark because that is ending a sentence... period.
Outside. (But if the entire sentence is a parenthetical like this one, it would go inside.)
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
Parenthesis go before the period. The period signals the end of the sentence.
The period typically goes after the closing parenthesis in American English.
The periods go outside the parenthesis. They wrap everything up.
If a quote ends a sentence and is followed by parentheses, the period goes inside the parentheses. For example: She said, "I will be there on time" (if nothing goes wrong).
Typically yes but it depends on the context.
It depends. What is the sentence you want to use?
The period goes after the closing parenthesis of the citation.
In American English, the period always goes inside the closing quotation mark, regardless of whether it is part of the quoted text or not. In British English, the period can go inside or outside the quotation marks depending on the context.
the question in the parenthesis comes first you do the question in the parenthesis then go back and do the other half thats not in parenthesis
For example, would it be: "Why do you care if he got the better grade"? (51) or would it be: "Why do you care if he got the better grade" (51)? (I am the poster, I just couldn't fit all the words in the post.
If you're constructing a sentence that has two independent clauses connected by a semicolon and the first sentence happens to end with a quotation mark, hypothetically, the semicolon would go inside of the ending quotation mark. This is rarely the case, though. Typically, quotations end in either a comma and a conjunction, a single comma, or simply a period.
former name does go in parenthesis if stating current name.