Some people quote Confucius all the time.
Please don't quote me.
If you use a word-for-word quote you put you put the quoted material in quotation marks. For instance "what you do if you use a word for word quote" then you would put were your found the quote
My friend Nicole wrote a quote about Rosa Parks
To acknowledge that you are changing a word in a quote, you can use square brackets to indicate the alteration. This helps to maintain the original context of the quote while making it clear that you have made a modification.
quote word for word
Quote/quotation.
Use an apostrophe to create the single quotation mark.
You can use the term "quote-unquote" to signal that you are quoting a word or phrase that may not be an exact or preferred term, adding emphasis or indicating skepticism. For example, "She described him as her 'business partner,' quote-unquote, raising doubts about the true nature of their relationship."
If you're citing for a report or a research paper, yes. You don't have to do the whole quote though, you can use the "..." to skip over parts in the quote you don't need.
He used the quote in his essay. The insurance agent quoted the family for a policy. She loves quoting Shakespeare in her books.
He paraphrased the quote in his paper to make his argument stronger.
The automotive technician gave me a quote for repairs that shocked me.
After the last word of the quote, include a space, then type three periods with no spaces in between, followed by the appropriate punctuation for the sentence. Make sure to use only three periods in the ellipsis.