has been changed
quotation marks
The quotation is exactly as in the original.
add brackets
You should put your change into brackets. If you must use ellipsis [three dots] to show you omitted text altogether, you put it into brackets also.
brackets.
Any changes in the original version of a quotation must be placed in square brackets to indicate that the words have been added, removed, or altered.
Yes. For example, you may want to give a slang alternative in quotes in brackets.
You place brackets around the words that you have changed in a direct quotation. You should also only do this for grammatical reasons or for clarification... not to mislead the reader or cause the misinterpretation of a quotation. An example would be Shakespeare's quotation "To be or not to be." If I were worried that young readers might not understand what Hamlet is pondering, I could quote it like this: "To [exist] or not to [exist]. That is the question." You would use ellipses if you are only leaving something out, not changing it: "To be or not to be . . . is the question."
a notation apex brackets.
no that is for a book a show is in quotation
You can use brackets in a quotation when the quotation doesn't quite match up with the sentence you've put it in, there are words missing from the original quote that are required for it to make grammatical sense, or if you would prefer to use a pronoun in place of a name and vice versa, or when you wish to clarify a pronoun by including the noun it originally referred to. Example: I appreciate it [the honor], but I must refuse.
no