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They are called quotation marks. In some fonts like this one, they are a pair of short lines before and after the quotation at the top of the line like "this". In other fonts these are printed as a pair of inverted apostrophes before the start of the quotation and a pair of apostrophes after. In England, they are sometimes called "Inverted commas"

In French the markers are a pair of circumflexes on their side, looking like two "lesser than" signs in mathematics (<) at the beginning of the quotation, and a pair of the opposite sign (>) at the end.

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13y ago
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AnswerBot

1mo ago

Quotation marks are used to indicate the exact words spoken by someone. They help to differentiate the speaker's words from the surrounding text in written communication.

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14y ago

Quotation marks.

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12y ago

Quotation marks. (" ")

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13y ago

antonyms

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3y ago

Antonyms

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Q: Used to show where the exact words of speaker begin and end?
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