The correct punctuation for the question is: "He left the scene of the accident and tried to forget that it had happened?"
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.
Please provide the quotation in question so I can provide the correct edit for the punctuation.
The correct punctuation for the subject matter you referred to should include a question mark at the end of the sentence. This helps to indicate that the sentence is a question.
"Mlle" is correct. No further punctuation is necessary.
The correct punctuation for "The holidays, in my opinion, are depressing."
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.
Please provide the quotation in question so I can provide the correct edit for the punctuation.
The correct punctuation for the subject matter you referred to should include a question mark at the end of the sentence. This helps to indicate that the sentence is a question.
"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."
The correct punctuation for "Sam is scared" is a period (Sam is scared.).
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "Can you point me towards the elevator?"
Highway can be abbreviated to hwy. or Hwy.
The US punctuation is: Yes, if I am correct, the answer is fifty-five. (or) Yes. If I am correct, the answer is fifty-five.
Either you do not put the correct punctuation, or you use too many punctuation marks, or you use none. All sentences, at minimum, must have a period. Pauses need a comma. Interrogatory needs a question mark.
It would be: Yes, we can. (or more emphatically) Yes, we can!