after
Parentheses go before the period in a sentence. If the entire sentence is contained within the parentheses, then the period goes inside. However, if the parentheses are used to add information or clarification within a larger sentence, the period should be placed outside the closing parenthesis.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
In American English, the period typically goes inside the brackets if the entire sentence is contained within them. However, if the brackets are used within a larger sentence, the period goes outside the brackets. In British English, the period usually goes outside the brackets unless the entire sentence is within them.
Use a period inside of the closing parenthesis to indicate that the sentence within the parentheses is ending. Use a period outside of the closing parenthesis to indicate that the sentence in which the parenthetical occurs is ending. Example: This was published in 1968 (Mary Jenkins looked it up.). or This was published in 1968. (Mary Jenkins looked it up.)
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.
A period should come before the footnote at the end of a sentence, while a comma should not.
no you need a comma before the open quotations and I'm not sure what you mean be footnote, but you probably don't need a period at the end of your sentence
It always goes at the end of the sentence. It may seem counter-intuitive, but that is according to the MLA guidelines. Also, the period goes before the number as demonstrated here (123).
An asterisk typically goes after a full stop (period) when it is used to indicate a footnote or additional information. For example: "This is a sentence.*" The asterisk is placed outside the punctuation. However, if the asterisk is part of a sentence or used in a different context, it would follow the relevant punctuation rules.
Quotations should go after the period at the end of the sentence when copying a sentence from a book.
Parenthesis go before the period. The period signals the end of the sentence.
Parentheses go before the period in a sentence. If the entire sentence is contained within the parentheses, then the period goes inside. However, if the parentheses are used to add information or clarification within a larger sentence, the period should be placed outside the closing parenthesis.
Yes, in APA style, the period for a sentence comes before the internal citation. This means that your sentence should end with a period, followed by the internal citation. For example: "This is a sample sentence." (Author, Year).
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
Use a period inside the bracket to indicate the sentence inside is ending. Use a period outside of the bracket to indicate that the entire sentence (before the bracketed sentence) has ended.
The time before the war is called the antebellum period.
Yes, you mark the end of a sentence in the same way.