It all depends.
You can use the quote "like this" or something like this, "Blahblhabkjdasf".
If you want to use it in a more formal essay style where you attach sources on your document, you do "exactly the same as this" (Source A).
When a quote is interrupted by narrative, use ellipses (...) to indicate the omission of text within the quote. Place the punctuation inside the quotation marks at the end of the interrupted speech. Resume the narrative outside the quotation marks.
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.
Quotes are preceded and followed by quotation marks. Such as "this"...
Yes, when typing a quote, it is important to include both the opening and closing quotation marks to denote the beginning and end of the quoted text. This helps to clearly indicate that the words within the quotation marks are being cited from another source or speaker.
1) You start the quote with double speech marks, eg. " 2) Then you quote the dialogue with a single speech mark, eg. ' 3) End your dialogue with the single speech marks, eg. ' 4) End the entire quote with double speech marks, eg. " Here's an example: "'Isabella Burnell is going to be a servant when she grows up,' said Joe."
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.
In the quotation marks.
To show where the exact words of a speaker begin and end, you can use quotation marks. These are punctuation marks that enclose the speaker's words to set them apart from the rest of the text. It helps indicate that the content within the quotation marks is a direct quote.
The quotation marks are placed at each end. In other words, the question mark should be inside the quotation marks.
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.
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.
Double quotation marks " are used for a quote: John said, "Hello there." and quickly walked away. Single quotation marks ' are used for quotes within a quote: John said, "Thomas Jefferson once wrote, 'All men are created equal.' and it's still true today." Triple quotation marks '" are used when the quote within the quote falls at the end of the sentence: John said, "Thomas Jefferson once wrote, 'All men are created equal.'"