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If a proper name or nickname is part of a quote and requires quotation marks, use double quotation marks for the overall quote and single quotation marks within the quote for the proper name or nickname.
No. It depends on the data type. So numbers would not be in quotation marks for example.
You would put quotation marks around radio shows because they are talking.
Musicals are either underlined or italicized. Individual songs from a musical would be surrounded by quotation marks.
Yes. You would put quotation marks around the name of a game.Examples"Minecraft""Just Dance"
If you are writing something else and referring to an essay you have written, you would put the title of that essay in quotation marks, but the title at the top of your essay (like the title of any document) should not have quotation marks.
Because underlining quotations is not standard practice, the choice would be stylistic. It would be best to be consistent with whatever method (underlining quotation marks or not) you choose though.
Quotation marks never indicate emphasis. I would leave them off names.
There are no quotation marks in that sentence unless you state who's saying it. "Give me your hand", said Mary, would be correct.
The lyrics would be most commonly in quotation marks. The title would simply be capitalized.
The comma goes inside the quotation marks in American English, but outside in British English. So, in American English, it would be "thanks," you.
You would typically use quotation marks to indicate that the text is a direct quote from a presidential speech. Underlining is not commonly used for this purpose in modern writing styles.