You use the following punctuation: "Quote 'quote within a quote' continuation of orginial quote."
Example: According the Brown, "sentiments are considered 'primordial' only when they are deeply rooted in the collective consciousness of a group" (citation).
yes. th person who is quoting could be quoting someone who is quoting someone else and so on.
If you have a quote in the middle of the sentence then don't put a period there, put a comma, an exclamation mark, or a question mark. If it is at the end of a sentence then put a period inside the quotation marks.
You put the quotation marks around what was said, start a new paragraph for each speaker, and put any punctuation marks inside the quotation marks.
No Reason why not :)
You can use any regular punctuation inside the block quote (periods, commas, etc) but do not put any punctuation around the block quote (no quotation marks).
re-congregate (I think you can put the word "re" in front of that...But don't quote me lol)
If you use a word-for-word quote you put you put the quoted material in quotation marks. For instance "what you do if you use a word for word quote" then you would put were your found the quote
Yes. To write it out, the first quote would open and close with quotation marks ". the quote within a quote would open and close with single marks '. For Example: Fred Brown responded, "Well, I think Benjiman Franklin was right when he said 'A penny saved is a penny earned'. Saving is important."
Yes, it is possible to put a suitcase inside another suitcase as long as the size and shape of the suitcases allow for it. This can be a convenient way to save space when traveling or storing luggage.
A direct quote is a quote that you take from another source. You must put this in quotation marks and give a reference in parenthesis after the quote. An indirect quote is when somebody else's idea or data is taken and paraphrased. For this, quotation marks are not needed, but it still needs to be cited.
Put a quotation mark at the beginning of the quote and at the end of the quote. You do not need to put quotation marks around each sentence within that quote.
If you are writing what someone said, then it looks like this: Kate said, "Put this in the oven." It goes inside the quotation marks. If you are putting quotes around something to emphasize something: John thinks he is being "cool". It goes on the outside because you are just using the quotes around that particular word. If you are quoting what someone said, the punctuation mark goes inside the quotation marks.