Please quote accurately from your source.
A quote which is incorporated within a sentence where it makes sense with the rest of the sentence.
You can quote me on that.
"You can start a sentence with a quote," the teacher said, "and there is certainly nothing wrong with doing so."
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."
Yes, you can start a sentence with a quote in an essay, but it is important to properly introduce and integrate the quote into your writing to maintain clarity and coherence.
A phrase is an unfinished sentence or a quote.
If you have a quote in the middle of the sentence then don't put a period there, put a comma, an exclamation mark, or a question mark. If it is at the end of a sentence then put a period inside the quotation marks.
Here is an example sentence that uses the keyword "start quote" correctly: She said, "Start quote, I will be there at 5 o'clock sharp, end quote."
Put a quotation mark at the beginning of the quote and at the end of the quote. You do not need to put quotation marks around each sentence within that quote.
When copying a quote that starts in the middle of a sentence, you can use an ellipsis (...) to indicate that the quote is a partial excerpt. Place the ellipsis at the beginning of the quote to signify that it doesn't start from the beginning of the sentence. This preserves the integrity of the original quote while indicating that it has been abbreviated for your specific purpose.
My friend Nicole wrote a quote about Rosa Parks
The dots in APA when a partial quote is used in a sentence are called ellipsis points.