I'm not sure what you mean by "quotes," but here are two possible answers. # You do not need to put your paragraph inside quotation marks unless it is not your paragraph. If you have copied a paragraph that someone else wrote, then you do put quotes around it, and also tell who wrote it. # If you would like to end your paragraph with a short quote by someone else, you certainly can do that. If you have found a quote that exactly sums up what you wanted to say, you can conclude by writing "X said, 'Y,'" or "As X said, 'Y'" - X would be the name of the author and Y would be whatever they said. As Heather Armstrong said, "Keep writing."
No, each paragraph should be about the same subject. If you start a new subject, you need to start a new paragraph also.
Usually not--each new speaker should start a new paragraph.
To properly format a new paragraph in MLA format, you should indent the first line of the paragraph by half an inch or five spaces. This helps to visually separate the paragraphs and make the text easier to read.
Yes, when writing dialogue, you should start a new paragraph each time a different character speaks. This helps to make the conversation clear and easier to follow for the reader.
You do not have to underline it. A new paragraph should start on a new line and the first line may be indented, but this is optional.
In proofreading, the symbol used to show where a new paragraph should begin looks like: ¶.
each new line of dialouge
Sort of... when a new person begins speaking, you should start a new line, but not a new paragraph. Hope that helped :D
Yes because it is a new paragraph.
the best way to start a new paragraph in essays is with an opening statment whick will describe what your going to be writing about in that paragraph!
In dialogue, each separate speaker starts a new paragraph on a new line. When a speaker enters again later, it should still be a new paragraph on a new line.
You start a new paragraph when the subject changes, and if you're writing dialogue, also when the speaker changes.