"Es mejor morir a pie que vivir arrodillado." - Emiliano Zapata
"A penny saved is a penny earned." - Benjamin Franklin
Examples of quotations include: "The only way to do great work is to love what you do" by Steve Jobs, "In the end, it's not the years in your life that count. It's the life in your years" by Abraham Lincoln, and "Success is not final, failure is not fatal: It is the courage to continue that counts" by Winston Churchill.
support
No, you would put in quotations. For example: "Love Story"
support
After the question mark. Example: "Where are the keys?"
Johnson sought quotations from writers for the dictionary to provide example sentences that show the word's usage in context. This helped to clarify the meaning and usage of words for readers.
Quotations should be seamlessly integrated into a sentence and introduced with a lead-in phrase or a colon. Make sure the quoted material flows smoothly with the rest of the sentence and is relevant to the context. Additionally, be sure to punctuate the quotation correctly, following the rules of the citation style being used.
When quoting something that someone has said without altering it in any way. Like now here is an example of the question "When use of quotations?" Or.. My mother asked me, "Could you hand me the measuring cup?"
i have no answer
Embedding quotations is essential for you to scrape up marks. For example, if you were embedding the quotation 'hard and sharp as flint' from A Christmas Carol [Charles Dickens] you may say, 'For example, Scrooge is described as being 'hard and sharp as flint' by the narrator. We've put it in the middle of a sentence.
"thinly the fell, like rat-trails, one by one"
"Bartlett's Familiar Quotations"
Frederick Talbott has written: 'Shakespeare on leadership' -- subject(s): English Quotations, Leadership, Quotations, Quotations, English, Quotations, maxims