Here are some sentences.
Did he make up that poem or is he quoting someone else?
She was very good at quoting long speeches.
It depends on the context. If you are quoting mid-sentence and the quote wasn't the end of your sentence then the next word shouldn't be capitalized.
He used the quote in his essay. The insurance agent quoted the family for a policy. She loves quoting Shakespeare in her books.
[Sic] is used to indicate that an error is in the original text when quoting from another source.
You only capitilize the first word if it is a capital in the original. If you are quoting from the middle of a sentence, just put in quotation marks, a few dots, and then begin the quote. eg: "...or not to be: that is the question."
The Latin word sic ("thus") in a quotation or citation means "This error is not a typo: they actually said it or wrote it as we have recorded."
I was not going to ask Herb for advice, because I knew that he would most likely respond by quoting some old Russian proverb.
You should only capitalize the first word in a quotation if you are quoting from the start of a line, or if the first word is a name. For example, if I were to quote myself, "You should only capitalize the first word in a quotation...". This is quoting from the start of a sentence, so the first word is capitalized. However, "capitalize the first word of a quotation..." does not start at the beginning of the sentence, so it doesn't need to be capitalized.
No, paraphrasing is restating someone else's ideas or words in your own words, while quoting is directly copying someone else's words.
Yes.
Yes, you would.
In a line of dialogue in a story. Or if you are quoting a person. So if you were to say and 7 times consecutively, and i quoted you on paper, it would be grammatically correct.
Yes, if you are leaving out anything in that sentence said before the part you are quoting