Quotations should go after the period at the end of the sentence when copying a sentence from a book.
Well, either that, or, you would be a comma, depending upon rather or not you wish to continue the sentence!
no you need a comma before the open quotations and I'm not sure what you mean be footnote, but you probably don't need a period at the end of your sentence
Well, quotations are these little things that look like this " and they go before the sentence starts and after the period at the end. However you only put quotations on a sentence that a person is saying like "Hello, my name is Emily." Not She put the book on the shelf.
A period does come before a quotation mark if the quotation at the end of the sentence, such as:Lucy than said, "Hi, Mr. Warner."If the quotation is not at the end of the sentence, use a comma instead of a period, such as:"Hi, Mr. Warner," Lucy replied.
Parenthesis go before the period. The period signals the end of the sentence.
A period should come before the footnote at the end of a sentence, while a comma should not.
Yes, in APA style, the period for a sentence comes before the internal citation. This means that your sentence should end with a period, followed by the internal citation. For example: "This is a sample sentence." (Author, Year).
yes you do ======== The comma and the period are always placed inside the quotation marks.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
after
The time before the war is called the antebellum period.
Use a period inside the bracket to indicate the sentence inside is ending. Use a period outside of the bracket to indicate that the entire sentence (before the bracketed sentence) has ended.