No. They go on the outside. EX: "I am going on a trip," said Zoey.
A colon generally goes before the closing quote.
With NO exceptions, the comma and period should go BEFORE the closing quotation mark. Always.
If a comma is needed, it normally comes after parenthesis.
yes
The comma goes inside the quotes. Colons and semi-colons go outside.
yes
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
The comma typically goes before the closing quotation mark when something in quotes is within a sentence. For example: She said, "I will be there soon."
A comma typically goes before "so" when it is used at the beginning of a sentence to indicate a reason or result. However, when "so" is used as a conjunction in the middle of a sentence, it does not usually need a comma before it.
No. They go on the outside. EX: "I am going on a trip," said Zoey.
It could go either ways?
A comma is generally not needed before "because" in a sentence. However, if "because" is introducing a dependent clause, a comma can be used after it to separate it from the main clause.
Not necessarily. There is no word in English that requires a comma before or after it.
after
no
No.