Quotation marks should be used if the passage says "Bob thought" or something similar. In this case, the quotation marks are used in the same way they would be used if the passage said "Bob said"
no only quotes
i need help
Need to have the complete sentence. "I am coming next week" he replied. -- direct speech He said that he was coming next week. -- indirect speech
sometimes if it is a question.hoped it helped
"What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
If by speech marks you mean qoutation marks (i.e. ""), then no, you do not need them, as the speech bubble implies it.
No, you don't
Quotation marks are not necessary when indicating a character's thoughts in a story. It is common to use italics to show a character's inner dialogue or thoughts without the need for quotation marks.
He was dedicating the Gettysburg cemetery and his speech laid out his thinking about the need for unification of the states.
If you thinking about breaking up with someone, ask yourself why you are thinking that. Some reasons you might be thinking about breaking up with someone are; you have feelings for someone else, you don't trust them, you caught them with someone else, you are not getting what you need from them. There are more, too. Be honest with your self first, and then with them.
No, whatever end punctuation is at the end of the quote is enough. No comma is needed.Examples:Correct - She screamed, "The house is on fire!" and then she ran out the front door.Incorrect - She screamed, "The house is on fire!," and then she ran out the front door.
Yes you need to use quotation marks when writing down what someone new says.
You need excellent marks.
If someone is saying it... "Hi," John said.
You need to answer this question because your teacher is looking for your critical thinking skills and how well you understood the lesson.
In American English, capitalize the first letter if the text within the quotation marks is a complete sentence. For British English, capitalize only when the quoted text is a complete sentence that starts a new line.
Olympic is a noun.