The correct punctuation for "Are you there yet?" she asked is to add a question mark after "yet" and keep the tag question in lowercase followed by a comma.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "How was your weekend?" Jerry asked.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
It should be--- I asked my friend,"When is your birthday?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "How was your weekend?" Jerry asked.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
It should be--- I asked my friend,"When is your birthday?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Mr. Carroll, do you know of any jobs we could do after school?" asked Fred.
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.
The correctly punctuated sentence is: "Do you know how to run this machine?" asked Ben. (You do not use a comma because of the question mark. - US punctuation rule)
help.............................
"What shall we do, Fred ? " asked Tim. ( If Tim is talking to Fred.)"What shall we do? " Fred asked Tim. (If Fred is talking to Tim.)
"Mlle" is correct. No further punctuation is necessary.
The correct punctuation for "The holidays, in my opinion, are depressing."
The correct punctuation change is: "The composer had a preponderance."