Well, it should be MAY I have some of your drink, but here's the punctuation.
"May I have some of your drink?" asked Karen.
The quotation marks always go outside of the punctuation of the dialogue sentence, to show that it's dialogue instead of just a plain sentence.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Can I have some of your drink?" asked Karen.
Can I have some of your drink, ββasked karenββ
Can I have some of your drink 'asked karen'.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "How was your weekend?" Jerry asked.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
The correct punctuation for the sentence "I asked my friend, 'When is your birthday?'" is to add a comma after "friend" and use single quotation marks around the quoted question.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
The correct punctuation for the sentence "I asked my friend, 'When is your birthday?'" is to add a comma after "friend" and use single quotation marks around the quoted question.
The correctly punctuated sentence is: "Do you know how to run this machine?" asked Ben. (You do not use a comma because of the question mark. - US punctuation rule)
help.............................
Can you think of Beethoven as both rough hewn and epicene?, Bernstein asked.
A period at the end is the only punctuation in most cases. It is a declarative sentence.
The sentence, 'Can you see if my sentence is correct?', is correct.
Yes
The correct capitalization for the sentence is: Susan asked, "Have you read Thornton Wilder's 'Our Town'?"
"What shall we do, Fred ? " asked Tim. ( If Tim is talking to Fred.)"What shall we do? " Fred asked Tim. (If Fred is talking to Tim.)
No, ask is in the incorrect tense. The correct tense is asked. I ask. He asked. Ted asked.
The way you asked the question adds no value to the answer.
Since it is a statement that David asked, just treat it as a statement. "David asked if the Week 4 assignment needed to be uploaded to Waypoint."