"How many stoplights are on Main Street?"
"How many stoplights are on Main Street, if you know?"
The best way to punctuate the bolded portion of the sentence would be to use quotation marks, for example: "This is the bolded portion of the sentence."
The best way to punctuate the bolded portion of the sentence would be: "I am sure Beth said, 'that you are right.'"
The sentence should be punctuated as: "The district attorney you're serious about has been arrested."
I would punctuate your sentence as follows: "We had, I guess I'll call it 'materials,' delivered to our home." However, it is an awkward sentence as written. You might want to change the structure to something like, "We had what I will loosely refer to as 'materials' delivered to our home."
"He will never understand it in a thousandβno, make that a million years."
How do you punctuate this sentence? Here goes: "If you had to guess, would they be in a box? Do you think they got thrown away?"
The sentence can be punctuated differently to convey different meanings: A woman, without her man, is nothing. (emphasizes the necessity of a man) A woman: without her, man is nothing. (emphasizes the importance of women) A woman without her man is nothing. (implies a reliance on a man) A woman: without her, man is nothing. (emphasizes the idea of a woman's independence)
You would say I, too, like dogs.
The correct sentence would be... "Watch out !" yelled Max.
You would correctly punctuate this as dialogue, and as a question."What can you possibly mean by that?" she stormed.You could also make it an exclamatory sentence as part of dialogue."What can you possibly mean by that!" she stormed.
Bushfires shouldn't have an apostrophe.
The sentence "What a clever girl" is already punctuated correctly with a period. It could also be punctuated with an exclamation mark to convey excitement or emphasis: "What a clever girl!"
There have always been atrocities in warfare. If: I were, to punctuate ! a sentence' like; this it would, be to commit/atrocities !- (There, you get two examples, at no extra cost !)
This sentence would be punctuated in the following way: "It's a flock of emus," stated Kien.
Write your sentence (then your parenthetical). Use the same punctuation inside the parentheses as you would outside of them and end the sentence with an ending punctuation mark (period).
I would punctuate your sentence as follows: "We had, I guess I'll call it 'materials,' delivered to our home." However, it is an awkward sentence as written. You might want to change the structure to something like, "We had what I will loosely refer to as 'materials' delivered to our home."
It should be--- The children were sleeping peacefully; we decided not wake them.