Remember when I answered that question, "Give a quotation using styles of letters?"
Melba
Please provide the quotation you would like an explanation of.
A paraphrase and a quotation both involve using information or ideas from another source in your own writing. A paraphrase rephrases the original text in your own words, while a quotation directly uses the author's exact words within quotation marks. Both techniques require proper citation to give credit to the original source.
Both a paraphrase and a quotation involve using someone else's ideas or words in your writing. However, a paraphrase restates the original text in your own words, while a quotation repeats the exact words of the original text. Both must be properly cited to give credit to the original source.
There are no quotation marks in that sentence unless you state who's saying it. "Give me your hand", said Mary, would be correct.
"Give me your hand," she said.
There are no words in English using the given ten letter configuration. There are ten letters words using those three letters in that order; for example digitalize or radicalize.
It is still necessary to include a citation even if you are using only part of a quotation. This is to give credit to the original source and to avoid plagiarism. Always provide proper attribution when quoting or referencing someone else's work.
Fight for their freedom and the freedom of their new country.
An indirect quotation is a statement by the writer of what another person said but in the writer's words, not the actual words of the original speaker. For example "Judy said she would drop by after she got off work". A direct quotation uses the exact words of the speaker. for example "'I'll come over when I get off work' said Judy".
Give me your hand,"she said".
To be or not to be. That is the question.from Shakespeare's Hamlet