They are called either quotation marks or speech marks.
Use quotation marks around what someone has said. For example, "I love cats," she said.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: She turned around and said, "By the way, Sally, where were you on Halloween 1998?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence "George Gray said, 'Mary Beth is on the phone.'" is to place a comma after "said" and to use single quotation marks around "Mary Beth is on the phone."
To echo someone's words.
The missing punctuation mark is a period. The correct sentence should be: "Teacher said, 'Come follow me.'"
The punctuation should be: "Turn on the light," Tom said halfheartedly. The comma is used before the dialogue tag "Tom said," and the dialogue itself is enclosed in quotation marks.
It should be ----- I said, "Who are you?"
Said is a word meaning something that someone says.
The correct punctuation is: "You are old, Grandpa William," the young man said.
In American English, the period typically goes inside the closing quotation mark. For example, "This is a quote." In British English, the period goes outside the closing quotation mark. For example, "This is a quote".
It is said that someone has a good retort when they have said something creative or original in reply to something said to them. Having a good retort is the same as having a good reply.
Technically, it can mean that something is said which doesn't simply match what has already been said.
Nothing I Am Something Said Someone - 2009 was released on: USA: 21 July 2009 (DVD premiere)
"Someone had said" is used to indicate that the action occurred before another past event. "Someone said" simply states the action happened in the past. The use of past perfect ("had said") helps to clarify the sequence of events when discussing multiple actions in the past.
Verbatim
(Someone) will say. (or Something) will be said.
"What are you doing?" said Mum.
someone might say they have sticktoitiveness