You are the writer. Whether or not you would put onomatopoeia in quotation marks would depend on how you used it. The dog said, "Bark." The bee said, "Buzz." The dog ran down the street, bark bark. The bee flew past, buzz, buzz. Are you making it deliberate or inadvertent? Is it descriptive?
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.
Speech marks, also known as quotation marks, are placed at the beginning and end of a direct quotation to indicate that the words inside are being spoken by someone else. In American English, double quotation marks are typically used (" "), while in British English, single quotation marks are more common (' '). It's important to place the speech marks immediately before and after the quoted text.
Quotation marks are put around the spoken words in a dialogue.
NO. You do not need to use quotation marks around sounds. Quotation marks are only used to show something someone said. However, most poets do use italics to show sounds or when people talk. And yes, those words are onomatopoeia, though splash is somewhat in between as it could also be a noun or verb.
The only part of a song that goes in quotation marks is the title.
In the quotation marks.
Titles of poems should be put in inverted commas (quotation marks).
after the quotation marks because if put before the quotation mark, that makes the quote seem like if it continues after what you wrote even if the quote has ended. period marks go before the quotation mark because that is ending a sentence... period.
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.
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
"..." Quotation marks.
No, the quotation marks go after the comma or period.
In American English, question marks typically go inside quotation marks if the quoted material itself is a question. For example: He asked, "Are you coming?" However, if the entire sentence is a question but the quoted material is not, the question mark goes outside the quotation marks, as in: Did she really say, "I will not attend"?
Only short films go in quotation marks. Full-length films are italicized. Similarly, short story titles are put in quotation marks, while titles of full-length books are italicized.Also, titles of TV shows are italicized, while episodes are put in quotation marks (for example, episode, "Humbug," of The X-files).
If a word is in quotation marks, and you're quoting it, use single quotation marks to indicate an embedded quotation.
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.