A colon is typically used after "P.S." in a letter or message, followed by the additional content.
Depends! (If the sentence starts and ends inside the brackets the punctuation does too.) If the sentence is part in (and part out) the punctuation goes outside the brackets. It is the same with quotation marks (look in a newspaper and you'll see what I mean).
A question mark (?) goes at the end of an interrogative sentence.
The end punctuation in a sentence with parentheses depends on the overall sentence structure. If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period goes inside the closing parenthesis. If the information in the parentheses is additional or clarifying, the ending punctuation goes outside the closing parenthesis.
There is no punctuation after the word enclosure at the end of a letter. You simply not how many enclosures are included.
A question mark goes at the end of an interrogative sentence. Ex: Johnny, did you eat the last cookie?
Punctuation goes after the bracket.
When writing a letter the address should be ' Dear Sir/Madam/name, . The comma comes after the 'name'. NOT the 'dear'. e.g. Dear Sir, Dear Madam, Dear Joe, Dear Betty, Your Grace ( Lord/Lady) Your Majesty (King/Queen ). Then an acknowledgement and thanks for any previous letter/epistle/written communication. Then the text of you message. Ending should be Business Yours faithfully, (Note the comma position) Friendship Yours sincerely/ truly, ( Again note the comma position. If writing to the King, (King Charles(III) of Great Britain). It is NOT ' Dear King' , but, ' Your Majesty. ' (No 'dears' about it). and you sign it as ' Your obedient subject, ' Similarly Lords of the realm/Bishops (Dukes, Barons, etc., ) as , ;Your Grace, '
semi-colon
[Name], DC
Depends! (If the sentence starts and ends inside the brackets the punctuation does too.) If the sentence is part in (and part out) the punctuation goes outside the brackets. It is the same with quotation marks (look in a newspaper and you'll see what I mean).
A question mark (?) goes at the end of an interrogative sentence.
Both PS and P.S. are acceptable.PS is favoured more in countries which use UK English, such as the UK, Australia and New Zealand, while P.S. Is still commonly used in the US.
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.
The end punctuation in a sentence with parentheses depends on the overall sentence structure. If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period goes inside the closing parenthesis. If the information in the parentheses is additional or clarifying, the ending punctuation goes outside the closing parenthesis.
It is acceptable to write either P.S. or PS, both of which stand for post script. In countries such as the UL, Australia and New Zealand, no punctuation is required, but the US tends to opt for the P.S. format.
pimps, price,prostitues are the 3 ps. rest four ps goes to hr
A friend of mine...... Anomonus