Before we had italics, it had to be quotation marks, but now, I think italics is sufficient, particularly if you are referring to it as a source. Maybe different rules for published treatises.
Either italicize the name of the paper or underline the name. Place the names of articles or sections of the newspaper in quotation marks.
Quotation marks are put around the spoken words in a dialogue.
They are called quotation marks and are "......"
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.
No, typically a comma is not placed after a punctuation mark such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point. Commas are used to separate elements within a sentence.
Either italicize the name of the paper or underline the name. Place the names of articles or sections of the newspaper in quotation marks.
speech marks
Quotation Marksquotations
No, you underline Novels and books
You can use any regular punctuation inside the block quote (periods, commas, etc) but do not put any punctuation around the block quote (no quotation marks).
Quotation marks are put around the spoken words in a dialogue.
put in right punctuation or go to brainpop.com
Whenever possible, italicize novel titles. Otherwise, underline them.
"Good morning, Laura." Put a comma before the person's name.
You put the quotation marks around what was said, start a new paragraph for each speaker, and put any punctuation marks inside the quotation marks.
They are called quotation marks and are "......"
When writing a dialogue, there should be quotations marks around the spoken words. An example of this would be: Then she answered, "I don't remember."