After
No. They go on the outside. EX: "I am going on a trip," said Zoey.
A comma typically goes before parentheses if the sentence structure requires it. For example, in the sentence "She decided to go to the park (which was quite crowded), despite the weather," the comma is placed before the parentheses. However, if the parentheses are at the end of a sentence and the sentence does not require a comma, then no comma is needed.
A comma typically comes before a conjunction when it connects two independent clauses in a compound sentence. For example, in the sentence "I wanted to go for a walk, but it started to rain," the comma is placed before "but." However, no comma is needed if the conjunction is connecting two items in a series or two phrases.
A colon generally goes before the closing quote.
With NO exceptions, the comma and period should go BEFORE the closing quotation mark. Always.
The comma goes inside the quotes. Colons and semi-colons go outside.
yes
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
Why indeed? In British English punctation it goes outside ...
No. They go on the outside. EX: "I am going on a trip," said Zoey.
Not necessarily. There is no word in English that requires a comma before or after it.
No.
no
after
Before
It could go either ways?