Punctuation goes after the bracket.
"What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
The single word 'Go' can only be considered a sentence when followed by punctuation characters that end a sentence (exclamation marks, question marks, period).Example : "Go!" (this is a single-word imperative form with the subject you understood)
Punctuations and capitalization go hand in hand. Capital letter at the beginning of the sentence means that it's the start of the sentence then a period or question or exclamation point denotes the end of the sentence.
exclamation point. It should be --- Go away!
M.P.H.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
The correct punctuation for that sentence would be: "They all sang 'Happy Birthday' before she cut the cake." This includes putting 'Happy Birthday' in quotation marks and ending the sentence with a period.
At the end of a sentence.
The comma typically goes before the parentheses if it is part of the main sentence. If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period or other punctuation mark will typically go inside the parentheses.
It depends if the quotation is a question or statement. If the quote is a question, the quotation mark goes before the punctuation; if the quotation requires a period, the marks goes outside of the statement.
Punctuation usually goes inside the parentheses if it's part of the text within the parentheses. If the entire sentence, including the parentheses, is a standalone sentence, then the punctuation goes outside the parentheses.
"Let's go to the movies at 10 pm." - This sentence segment is correctly punctuated.
Footnotes typically go at the end of the sentence, after any punctuation marks. This helps readers easily identify the source or additional information related to that particular sentence.
"What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
Well, it should be MAY I have some of your drink, but here's the punctuation."May I have some of your drink?" asked Karen.The quotation marks always go outside of the punctuation of the dialogue sentence, to show that it's dialogue instead of just a plain sentence.
The sentence requires quotation marks around "maybe we can go earn some money," and a comma after "money." It should read: "Maybe we can go earn some money," Tim suggested.
If the contents of the bracket is a phrase or is merely adding to the sentence, the fullstop/period comes after the closing bracket. However, if the contents of the bracket is a full sentence or even several sentences, then the fullstop/period is inside of the bracket.Example:A new assignment? I was so excited (not).A new assignment? I was so excited (That's not actually true.).A new assignment? I was so excited. (That was sarcasm. I was not actually excited.)