Yes, quotation marks are used to specify text data in criteria to help the system differentiate between actual text and other values like numbers or functions. This is especially important in database queries or when creating formulas in spreadsheets to ensure the correct data is being referenced.
Typically, if the words are your own you do not need to enclose them in quotation marks. However, if you specifically mean the words to be understood as dialogue, you should put quotation marks around them.
Enclose the quote with quotation marks: "Put the quote from a play here."
Quotation marks are used to denote direct speech, to enclose a quotation within a sentence, or to indicate the use of a term in a non-literal or ironic sense.
" And " are quotation marks and are used to enclose talking in writing
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.
In the quotation marks.
To get quotation marks, you press the Shift button and then the quotations button, which is directly to the left of the Enter key.
Quotation marks. "" <- are quotation marks
"..." Quotation marks.
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
The same punctuation is used inside of quotation marks as is used outside of quotation marks.
Quotation marks should not be used when blockquoting.