No I don't think so.. But it may depend.
In American English, commas and periods typically go inside quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation points go inside if they are part of the quoted material and outside if they are not. However, in British English, the punctuation goes outside the quotation marks unless it is part of the quoted material.
yes for example "Sally, go to your room!"
Inside; Sally said "my cat is dead."
Only when it is part of the quotation.
Punctuation usually goes inside the parentheses if it's part of the text within the parentheses. If the entire sentence, including the parentheses, is a standalone sentence, then the punctuation goes outside the parentheses.
The correct punctuation for "Sam will go into the water" is the sentence as-is, with no additional punctuation needed.
In American English, commas and periods are typically placed inside the quotation marks, while in British English, they are placed outside. It's important to check the style guide you are following for specific guidelines.
In American English, a period goes inside the closing apostrophe when it ends a sentence. However, in British English, the period goes outside the closing apostrophe. For example, "I love eating pizza." (American English) or "I love eating pizza". (British English).
Well, it should be MAY I have some of your drink, but here's the punctuation."May I have some of your drink?" asked Karen.The quotation marks always go outside of the punctuation of the dialogue sentence, to show that it's dialogue instead of just a plain sentence.
Punctuation usually goes inside the parentheses if it's part of the text within the parentheses. If the entire sentence, including the parentheses, is a standalone sentence, then the punctuation goes outside the parentheses.
British style places commas and periods that are not part of the quoted material outside of the quotation marks. Also, in technical applications or when discussing coding, punctuation that is not part of a text string should be placed outside of the quotes. Placing commas and periods inside the quotes implies that they are part of the string to be displayed.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
In dialogue, periods, commas, question marks, and exclamation points go inside quotation marks. (A semicolon goes outside quotation marks but isn't used much in dialogue, so you don't need to worry about it.)
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.
In American English, periods always go inside quotation marks. In British English, periods go inside quotation marks when they are part of the quoted material, but outside if they are not. It's important to be consistent with the style guide you are following.
you stay inside and let it go outside when it needs to.
Inside
Outside. (But if the entire sentence is a parenthetical like this one, it would go inside.)
Outside
Telescopes are used inside
Inside