You are the writer. Whether or not you would put onomatopoeia in quotation marks would depend on how you used it. The dog said, "Bark." The bee said, "Buzz." The dog ran down the street, bark bark. The bee flew past, buzz, buzz. Are you making it deliberate or inadvertent? Is it descriptive?
Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".
The plural of quotation is quotations.
Categoric or descriptive observations.Categoric or descriptive observations.Categoric or descriptive observations.Categoric or descriptive observations.
An embedded quotation is a quotation that is worked into the sentence that contains it.
In the quotation marks.
more descriptive, most descriptive
It's a quotation mark.
a quotation mark!!
Use single quotation marks to indicate a quote within a quote.If you're using a quote that contains a quote you'll need to surround the embedded quote with single quotation marks.
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
"..." Quotation marks.