question marks do not go after periods. .!
Periods, commas, question marks, and others are in the grouping of writing called, "Punctuation".
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
No, imperative statements do not have question marks at the end. Imperative sentences give commands or make requests and end with a period.
Valid punctuation marks in English include the period, the question mark, the comma, and the apostrophe. Other valid marks are the exclamation point, quotation marks, the colon, and semicolon.
No. A question mark acts just as well as a period.
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.
Indirect questions do not require question marks because they are structured as statements rather than direct inquiries. For example, in the sentence "I wonder where she went," the phrase "where she went" is an indirect question and is punctuated with a period. In contrast, direct questions, like "Where did she go?" do use question marks.
Quotation marks follow the question mark.
Periods, commas, question marks, and others are in the grouping of writing called, "Punctuation".
Question marks are the punctuation used when you ask a question. Here is an example: Can we go to the park today? This is the question mark: ?
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"?
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.
comma, period, colon, semi-colon, quotation marks, parentheses, brackets, braces, question mark, exclamation point, elipses, hyphen, dash, apostrophe.
No, imperative statements do not have question marks at the end. Imperative sentences give commands or make requests and end with a period.
commas go after question marks
No, the quotation marks go after the comma or period.
Valid punctuation marks in English include the period, the question mark, the comma, and the apostrophe. Other valid marks are the exclamation point, quotation marks, the colon, and semicolon.