False
No, when paraphrasing, you should rephrase the original source in your own words without directly copying any text from the source, even if it is a short phrase. This helps to avoid plagiarism and demonstrates your understanding of the material.
False
Anything that is exactly the same wording as your source. Usually if the phrase is more than 3 words. Also, the quote is only in quotation marks if it is less than 4 lines. Paraphrasing requires citation, but not quotation marks.
When you search for something in quotation marks you are searching for that phrase verbatim. If you were to search for "Where is voyager now?", you would find a page with that exact text somewhere on it. Without the quotation marks, the engine would remove common words, such as "Where" and "is", leaving you with a search of (Voyager, Now). The engine searches for pages where those two words are commonly used.
A quotation is usually where someone wishes to say something that has already been said by someone else. This is denoted by the use of "s around the word or phrase. For example: "To be, or not to be" - originally written by William Shakespeare.
Yes, a comma is typically used to separate a direct quotation from a signal phrase. For example: "According to the study," he stated, "the results were inconclusive."
Double quotation marks around a word or phrase indicate that you are searching for that exact word or phrase on a search engine. This tells the search engine to only return results with that specific word or phrase in the same order as you typed it.
To make it into a phrase you really should be using quotation marks: "for the last time" is a phrase.
Quotation marks are used when indicating someone is speaking in a narrative, when you are quoting something, or when you are referring to a word or phrase as a means to explain it. For example, I would say the word "noun" is actually a noun in itself since it is a "thing".
a word-for-word excerpt from a text
Answer is B: To show that the phrase is unfamiliar and not commonly used APEX
Put quotation marks around the phrase
Using double quotation marks to emphasize a word or phrase unnecessarily. Quoting without attribution or a clear indication of the original source. Failing to properly punctuate the quoted text within the quotation marks. Mixing single and double quotation marks in the same sentence.