Depends!
(If the sentence starts and ends inside the brackets the punctuation does too.)
If the sentence is part in (and part out) the punctuation goes outside the brackets.
It is the same with quotation marks (look in a newspaper and you'll see what I mean).
Punctuation usually goes inside the parentheses if it's part of the text within the parentheses. If the entire sentence, including the parentheses, is a standalone sentence, then the punctuation goes outside the parentheses.
In American English, commas and periods typically go inside quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation points go inside if they are part of the quoted material and outside if they are not. However, in British English, the punctuation goes outside the quotation marks unless it is part of the quoted material.
The period typically goes after the closing parenthesis in American English.
The correct punctuation for "Sam will go into the water" is the sentence as-is, with no additional punctuation needed.
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).
In American English, a period goes inside the closing apostrophe when it ends a sentence. However, in British English, the period goes outside the closing apostrophe. For example, "I love eating pizza." (American English) or "I love eating pizza". (British English).
The periods go outside the parenthesis. They wrap everything up.
It depends. What is the sentence you want to use?
yes
In American English, commas and periods typically go inside quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation points go inside if they are part of the quoted material and outside if they are not. However, in British English, the punctuation goes outside the quotation marks unless it is part of the quoted material.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
Typically yes but it depends on the context.
If one or more sentences are between parentheses, then put the period or other final punctuation between the parentheses: Always thank the bellboy. (Usually you should also tip him.) Otherwise put the period or other final punctuation outside the final parenthesis: Always thank the bellboy (and any other staff who has aided you). The period or other final punctuation belongs to the sentence as a whole. If the entire sentence is within parentheses, naturally that includes the final punctuation. If the parentheses enclose only part of sentence, naturally the final punctuation goes outside.
It depends if the quotation is a question or statement. If the quote is a question, the quotation mark goes before the punctuation; if the quotation requires a period, the marks goes outside of the statement.
If the content of the footnote is related to the entire sentence within parentheses, then the footnote should go outside of the closing parenthesis. However, if the footnote only applies to a specific word or phrase within the parentheses, it should go inside the closing parenthesis after that specific element.
In American English, periods always go inside quotation marks. In British English, periods go inside quotation marks when they are part of the quoted material, but outside if they are not. It's important to be consistent with the style guide you are following.
I believe the parentheses eliminate the need for the negative sign. For example: negative $100,000 would be expressed $(100,000). Using the negative sign, it would read: -$100,000.
you stay inside and let it go outside when it needs to.