Yes. You must always use quotation marks when you are including text in your work that is not your own. You must also give the original author credit either in you notes or in your bibliography.
marlon hamson
Yes you do.
To correctly type a quote, type an open quotation mark, then the exact quotation, then a closed quotation mark. Punctuation that is part of the quote goes in the quotation marks and all other punctuation goes outside of the quotation marks. To indicate you've skipped some words, use an ellipsis, and use brackets to indicate that you've changed words.
To show that a person is speaking.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
Typically, a quotation mark on a note card encloses direct quotes or citations from a text, speech, or other source. It signals that the enclosed text is borrowed word-for-word from another author or speaker. It is important to use quotation marks to give credit to the original source and avoid plagiarism.
In MLA format, you typically use the author's last name when citing sources in-text. If you mention the author's name in the sentence, you can just use their last name. If the author's last name is not mentioned in the sentence, you can include it in parentheses after the quotation or paraphrase.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
you underline it because you cant you a quotation mark to present a book or the title of a movie.
When citing an article without an author, use the title of the article in quotation marks followed by the publication date and the name of the publication.
A period does come before a quotation mark if the quotation at the end of the sentence, such as:Lucy than said, "Hi, Mr. Warner."If the quotation is not at the end of the sentence, use a comma instead of a period, such as:"Hi, Mr. Warner," Lucy replied.