Oh, wasn't it called the Piano Sonata No. 14? Interestingly if you wanted to call it by its informal name you would have to call it the "Moonlight Sonata".
You need one comma and one period to punctuate this sentence: If you begin now, you can finish the project by Thursday. Note: Many students add too many commas to their sentences. A comma should set off a clause.
It should be--- "Who called me a dingbat?" asked Edith.
It should be--- He is at any rate, supposed to speak to them.
It should be--- The children were sleeping peacefully; we decided not wake them.
Really now alone should be "Really, now?".
How should you punctuate this sentence, "Atlanta, the capital of Georgia, has been called teh pacesetter of the south?"
I need to punctuate this paragraph before submitting it to my teacher for review.
No it is not a rule. You should punctuate as normal.
It should be --- Then I said, "Why do I sign?"
"Great news! I'm looking forward to working together."
Yes, you should always punctuate a sentence that ends with a citation in a works cited. Use the appropriate punctuation mark (usually a period) to end the sentence before the citation.
She looked, but alas, it was not what she hoped for.
My suggestion: What is a phone tree, you ask?
If should be followed by a dependent clause, a comma, an independent clause and then a period.
Bushfires shouldn't have an apostrophe.
You like to run, but you walk sometimes.
This is a run-on sentence and need to be rewritten.