It is not compulsory to use a specific mark, but usually we use a comma.
There are more. , ? ! ' - / : ; () nevermind there's only 10
Valid punctuation marks in English include the period, the question mark, the comma, and the apostrophe. Other valid marks are the exclamation point, quotation marks, the colon, and semicolon.
Punctuations:1. Period ( . )2. Ellipses (...)3. Comma ( , )4. Semicolon ( ; )5. Apostrophe ( ' )6. Dash ( --- )7. Hypen ( - )8-9. Quotation Marks (" " ) and ( ' ')10. ItalicsExample: Can you spell wonder?11. Parentheses ( )12. Brackets [ ]13. Colon ( : )14. Slash ( / )
No, the semicolon should not be placed next to the question mark. Semicolons are used to separate independent clauses, while question marks are used to indicate a question or uncertainty in a sentence. Placing them together would not be grammatically correct.
The combination of a question mark with quotation marks is used to indicate a question within a quote. This punctuation is referred to as a question within a question or a quoted question.
In dialogue, periods, commas, question marks, and exclamation points go inside quotation marks. (A semicolon goes outside quotation marks but isn't used much in dialogue, so you don't need to worry about it.)
You did not give any quotations "above" - we cannot see your homework paper to know the answer.
Period . | Exclamation point ! | Question mark ? | Comma , |Colon : |Semicolon ; | Apostrophe ' |Ampersand & |The at sign @|The dash - | Single quotation marks "
There is the period, the comma, colon, semicolon, and apostrophe. There are also quotation marks, question mark, exclamation mark, hyphen, dash, parentheses, brace, and brackets.
Shakespeare did not say the quotations attributed to him, he wrote them in his plays so in answer to your question we don't know and words that came from his mouth but many phrases used today that were written in his plays. P.S. You have spelt quotations wrongly and Shakespeare is a name so should have a CAPITAL LETTER. I get what your trying to ask but it doesn't make sense. A quotation is not a quotation until someone repeats it and so he would not have said quotations.
There are more. , ? ! ' - / : ; () nevermind there's only 10
period, comma, question mark, exclamation mark, colon, semicolon, hyphen, dash, apostrophe, brackets, quotation marks, ellipsis, slash, parentheses
Valid punctuation marks in English include the period, the question mark, the comma, and the apostrophe. Other valid marks are the exclamation point, quotation marks, the colon, and semicolon.
The quotation "To be or not to be, that is the question" can be found in William Shakespeare's play "Hamlet". It is spoken by the title character, Prince Hamlet, in the famous soliloquy from Act 3, Scene 1.
It's really simple. Ask yourself: "Is there an entire question INSIDE the quotation marks? If so, put the question mark INSIDE the quotation marks.If not, then the question mark goes OUTSIDE the quotation marks.Here are two contrasting examples:Mary wants to know, "Who is that guy?". An entire question is inside the quotation marks. (Notice that a period is also needed at the end in order to end the REST of the sentence.)However:What is the topic of the "Educators' Seminar" today?There is not an entire quotation inside the quotation marks. The actual question word (what?) is not in quotation marks at all, and therefore the question mark should not be either.
14 punctuation marks in English grammar:1. Period ( . ) 2. Ellipses (...)3. Comma ( , )4. Semicolon ( ; )5. Apostrophe ( ' )6. Dash ( --- )7. Hypen ( - )8-9. Quotation Marks (" " ) and ( ' ')10. ItalicsExample: Can you spellwonder?11. Parentheses ( )12. Brackets [ ]13. Colon ( : )14. Slash ( / )
APOSTROPHE ' BRACKETS [] COLON : COMMA , DASH - DOUBLE HYPHEN = ELLIPSIS ... EXCLAMATION POINT ! HYPHEN - PARENTHESES () PERIOD . QUESTION MARK ? QUOTATION MARKS "" SEMICOLON ; VIRGULE / http://www.bartleby.com/68/78/4878.html