It depends. What is the sentence you want to use?
In American English, question marks typically go inside quotation marks if the quoted material itself is a question. For example: He asked, "Are you coming?" However, if the entire sentence is a question but the quoted material is not, the question mark goes outside the quotation marks, as in: Did she really say, "I will not attend"?
In American English, a question mark goes inside the quotation marks if the quoted material itself is a question. For example: She asked, "Are you coming?" If the entire sentence is a question but the quoted material is not, the question mark goes outside the quotation marks, as in: Did she really say, "I will join you"?
In American English, commas typically go inside quotation marks. For example, you would write: She said, "Let's go to the park." In British English, however, the placement of commas can vary depending on whether they are part of the quoted material, so they may appear outside the quotation marks in some cases. Always consider the style guide you are following for consistency.
I need to add quotation marks in that sentence
after the quotation marks because if put before the quotation mark, that makes the quote seem like if it continues after what you wrote even if the quote has ended. period marks go before the quotation mark because that is ending a sentence... period.
Typically yes but it depends on the context.
It depends where you live. In the USA punctuation is placed inside the quotes, like this: "My dog is brown." but in Britain, it is placed outside the quotation marks, like this "My dog is brown".
With NO exceptions, periods and commas go INSIDE the quotation marks. However, question marks (if the question comes at the end of the sentence) are put following the clause with the quotation marks outside the question mark. If there are two clauses within the sentence separated by a conjunction, and there is a semi colon required, the semi colon at the end of the first clause goes outside the quotation marks.
Punctuation marks such as periods and commas should be placed outside the set of quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation points should be placed inside if they are part of the quoted material, and outside if they are not.
Outside, like: The car was John's, so he had to pay for the repairs. However, if you are using the apostrophes as single quotation marks, then inside. Commas and periods always go inside quotation marks. "Like this."
In American English, a semicolon typically goes outside of quotation marks; whereas in British English, it goes inside. For consistency, it's best to check a specific style guide or follow the conventions of the English variant you are using.
In American English, dialog tags are typically placed outside the quotation marks. For example: "I love to read," she said. However, in British English, dialog tags are often placed inside the quotation marks. For example: "I love to read", she said. It's important to be consistent with whichever style guide you choose to follow.
The same punctuation is used inside of quotation marks as is used outside of quotation marks.
If the content of the footnote is related to the entire sentence within parentheses, then the footnote should go outside of the closing parenthesis. However, if the footnote only applies to a specific word or phrase within the parentheses, it should go inside the closing parenthesis after that specific element.
In American English, an exclamation point should be placed inside quotation marks, followed by a comma if necessary: He shouted, "Stop!" In British English, the exclamation point would be placed outside of the quotation marks: He shouted, "Stop"!
Inside.
The period always goes inside quotation marks - in all kinds of sentences - not just ones that have a song title.