quotation marks
Quotation marks. Sometimes brackets are used to refer to something in the quotation.
To show where the exact words of a speaker begin and end, you can use quotation marks. These are punctuation marks that enclose the speaker's words to set them apart from the rest of the text. It helps indicate that the content within the quotation marks is a direct quote.
antonyms
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quotation marks
quotation marks
Quotation marks are used to show the exact words of a speaker.
quatation marks: " "
quotation marks
Quotation marks are used to show the exact words a person said.
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They are called quotation marks. In some fonts like this one, they are a pair of short lines before and after the quotation at the top of the line like "this". In other fonts these are printed as a pair of inverted apostrophes before the start of the quotation and a pair of apostrophes after. In England, they are sometimes called "Inverted commas" In French the markers are a pair of circumflexes on their side, looking like two "lesser than" signs in mathematics (<) at the beginning of the quotation, and a pair of the opposite sign (>) at the end.
When you report someone's exact words, you are quoting them. Quotations are used to show the words spoken by an individual directly and should be enclosed in quotation marks to distinguish them from the rest of the text.