Outside, like:
The car was John's, so he had to pay for the repairs.
However, if you are using the apostrophes as single quotation marks, then inside. Commas and periods always go inside quotation marks. "Like this."
No before it.
An apostrophe is not required.
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of a letter or group of letters. Example: Don't = Do not (the apostrophe holds the place of the 'o') They've = They have (the apostrophe holds the place of the 'ha')
There is no apostrophe in wants. He wants to go to bed.Apostrophes are used instead of letters /words) that are omitted. He's got to go. (He has got to go)
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
The comma goes inside the quotes. Colons and semi-colons go outside.
No. They go on the outside. EX: "I am going on a trip," said Zoey.
In American English, a period goes inside the closing apostrophe when it ends a sentence. However, in British English, the period goes outside the closing apostrophe. For example, "I love eating pizza." (American English) or "I love eating pizza". (British English).
O'clock is a contraction. It is the shortened form meaning "of the clock". (Just so you know, the mark after the o is an apostrophe, not a comma. A comma and an apostrophe look alike. However, a comma is placed lower than the apostrophe. Example- We can go, but not until noon. (A comma is after the word go.) A comma is placed between words. An apostrophy is placed between letters. An apostrophy shows that letters have been omitted. A comma indicates a pause when reading.
The comma goes inside the quotation marks in American English, but outside in British English. So, in American English, it would be "thanks," you.
No before it.
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
If the comma is a part of the title, it would stay exactly where you found it.
Depends, really. If you're inserting the title of a novel, then yes. If you're inserting a quote and still continuing with the the sentence, then yes. If you're at the end of the sentence, then all you need is a period.
you stay inside and let it go outside when it needs to.
A comma splice occurs when two independent clauses are separated by a comma. This is incorrect punctuation. Example: Someone is at the door, I need to get dressed and go downstairs. One way to correct a comma splice is by subordination--that is, by using a subordinating conjunction. Example: Because someone is at the door, I need to get dressed and go downstairs.
Inside