Punctuation goes after the bracket.
"What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
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.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with those grammar questions, huh? Technically, "Go" can be a complete sentence if it's being used as a command. So, like, if you're telling someone to go away, that's a complete sentence. But if you're just randomly saying "Go" without any context, then it's more like a fragment. But hey, who really cares, right?
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 missing punctuation is a question mark. The sentence should be: "You want to go home?" shouted Martha.
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.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
A comma should generally be placed before brackets if it is part of the main sentence structure. If the brackets are used for additional information within a sentence, then the comma should go before the opening bracket.
Depends! (If the sentence starts and ends inside the brackets the punctuation does too.) If the sentence is part in (and part out) the punctuation goes outside the brackets. It is the same with quotation marks (look in a newspaper and you'll see what I mean).
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.
Oh, dude, punctuation? Who needs that? Just kidding! The correct punctuation for "Sam will go into the water" is a period at the end. So, it would be "Sam will go into the water." But like, if Sam's not a great swimmer, maybe throw in a life jacket too, just in case.
"Let's go to the movies at 10 pm." - This sentence segment is correctly punctuated.
A period (full stop) is the appropriate punctuation mark to follow the sentence "Please excuse your absence."