They are called either quotation marks or speech marks.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: She turned around and said, "By the way, Sally, where were you on Halloween 1998?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence "George Gray said, 'Mary Beth is on the phone.'" is to place a comma after "said" and to use single quotation marks around "Mary Beth is on the phone."
To echo someone's words.
The missing punctuation mark is a period. The correct sentence should be: "Teacher said, 'Come follow me.'"
"What are you doing?" said Mum.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: She turned around and said, "By the way, Sally, where were you on Halloween 1998?"
It should be ----- I said, "Who are you?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence "George Gray said, 'Mary Beth is on the phone.'" is to place a comma after "said" and to use single quotation marks around "Mary Beth is on the phone."
That is referred to as "weaponizing" something that was said.
Said is a word meaning something that someone says.
To echo someone's words.
The correct punctuation is: "You are old, Grandpa William," the young man said.
It is said that someone has a good retort when they have said something creative or original in reply to something said to them. Having a good retort is the same as having a good reply.
Technically, it can mean that something is said which doesn't simply match what has already been said.
If you are writing what someone said, then it looks like this: Kate said, "Put this in the oven." It goes inside the quotation marks. If you are putting quotes around something to emphasize something: John thinks he is being "cool". It goes on the outside because you are just using the quotes around that particular word. If you are quoting what someone said, the punctuation mark goes inside the quotation marks.
Nothing I Am Something Said Someone - 2009 was released on: USA: 21 July 2009 (DVD premiere)
The missing punctuation mark is a period. The correct sentence should be: "Teacher said, 'Come follow me.'"