One space,
EX.
"I am so happy!" She said.
Typically, you would indent by 1 inch or about 10 spaces for a long quotation in a document. However, you should always check the specific formatting guidelines provided by your instructor or the publication you are writing for.
none
One.
Italics or underling should be used for the titles of books, series of books, titles of periodicals and for titles of films. (Many schools and colleges prefer underling). Titles of short stories, poems and articles should be placed in quotation marks.
Dialogue punctuation is the punctuation you use when writing dialogue in, persay, a story. For example: "The dog is sleeping quietly on the rug," said Marie. The dialogue punctuations are the " " (quotation marks) and the , (comma).
To show that someone else is speaking.
one space. here's an example: "No way!" was dave's first comment.
There is a website called englishforeveryone.org that offers free worksheets on how to use quotation marks in sentences, as well as for 8 other punctuation marks. The site also provides the answer sheet as a separate link below the worksheet link so that you can test yourself and then be able to check your answers for accuracy. Here is the link to the website: http://www.englishforeveryone.org/Topics/Punctuation.htm
English orthography enjoys many transatlantic variations. In British English, quotation marks are called inverted commas, and they are not doubled, as they are in American English.
For academic papers, you should follow the appropriate style guide for your course. For example, the Modern Language Associations (MLA's) style handbook allows single spaces after periods and other terminal/concluding marks but also allows double spaces.Some punctuation marks should have no spaces following. For example, quotation marks should be neither preceded nor followed by a space, as seen in the following example:My friend said, "How are you?"Notice, however, that there is a single space after the comma in the example above. It is not a terminal/concluding mark and, according to the MLA, should always have a single space following it.Other styles include the American Psychological Association (APA) style and Chicago style. These styles have different rules concerning spaces after punctuation marks.
In American English, commas always go inside the quotation marks when separating multiple poem titles. For example: "The Road Not Taken," "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," and "O Captain! My Captain!"
In English language writing, there should be only one space before all punctuation marks, including periods, commas, semicolons, and question marks. This standard practice helps improve readability and typographic appearance in written text.