Quotes are preceded and followed by quotation marks. Such as "this"...
This is only used when you miss part of a quote out. So, if you quote the first part of a quote, miss out the middle, and then quote the end part, you should use the three or four periods to represent the missing text.
If you end an essay with a quote, it's best to keep the quote very brief. Ending an essay with a long quote looks lame and give the impression that it is a substitute for a conclusion. That said, there may be exceptional cases, where you need to end with a long quotation, but they are very rare.
make it match what you are saying
Sorry, there is no such idiom as "at wit's put end to". "at wit's end" means you have tried every possible way to solve a problem but cannot do it and do not know what to do next. "put and end to" means to stop or put a stop to something.
you put sincerely, your name
Put a quotation mark at the beginning of the quote and at the end of the quote. You do not need to put quotation marks around each sentence within that quote.
If you have a quote in the middle of the sentence then don't put a period there, put a comma, an exclamation mark, or a question mark. If it is at the end of a sentence then put a period inside the quotation marks.
Right after the quote.
yes you can, just put a coma before the quote.
they just decided to pick something that is said in the show to put at the end
In American English, periods and commas are placed inside the quotation marks at the end of a quote. In British English, punctuation placement depends on whether it is part of the quoted text.
This is only used when you miss part of a quote out. So, if you quote the first part of a quote, miss out the middle, and then quote the end part, you should use the three or four periods to represent the missing text.
And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country. Mankind must put an end to war, or war will put and end to mankind.
John F. Kennedy, our 35th President said this during his speech to the UN general assembly on September 25th 1961.
No Reason why not :)
You can end a quote with a quotation mark. If the quote continues in the same paragraph, a comma is typically placed before the closing quotation mark. If the quote is a complete sentence, the ending punctuation (like a period or question mark) comes before the closing quotation mark.
If you use a word-for-word quote you put you put the quoted material in quotation marks. For instance "what you do if you use a word for word quote" then you would put were your found the quote