A parenthesis is used in a sentence to indicate that you wish to interrupt your own sentence to include some comment or information that is incidental to the actual point of statement that your sentence is making. This is actually quite similar to the use of commas, which are used to separate different clauses of a sentence so that they don't all run together, but the parenthesis does so with greater emphasis, it sets something apart more forcefully than commas do.
Parentheses are the little "(" and ")" marks used to denote something said in an aside. You should enclose this phrase in parentheses.
No, it does not. Parentheses are used to include information that is not essential to the sentence. They can also be used to de-emphasize information. Of course, you can have complete sentences in parentheses, but it is not necessary.
Square brackets are used inside regular parentheses, in a sentence.
Generally, parentheses are used to set apart additional information from the main sentence. This additional information may include statistics, asides to the reader, or explanations of obscure terms.
Square brackets are used inside regular parentheses, in a sentence.
Parentheses are used in a sentence to capture a note relating to the wording of the sentence. Dashes and commas set apart words in a sentence.
(If it adds clarity) one may start a sentence with parentheses.
The entire sentence should be in parentheses, however the portion that is, should contain a period outside of the parentheses.
The word "traits" in parentheses in a sentence indicates that the term is being defined or clarified. It may be used to provide additional information or synonyms for the main concept being discussed.
The end punctuation in a sentence with parentheses depends on the overall sentence structure. If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period goes inside the closing parenthesis. If the information in the parentheses is additional or clarifying, the ending punctuation goes outside the closing parenthesis.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
A comma typically goes before parentheses if the sentence structure requires it. For example, in the sentence "She decided to go to the park (which was quite crowded), despite the weather," the comma is placed before the parentheses. However, if the parentheses are at the end of a sentence and the sentence does not require a comma, then no comma is needed.