Punctuate which part of the inside address? Both the sender's and recipient's addresses go inside a letter. Here's an example.
Sender's Street Address
City, ST 00000
Date
Recipient's Full Name
Business Name (if applicable)
Recipient's Street Address
City, ST 11111
Put a comma between the city and state.
For the states, use the official postal abbreviations (e.g., NY, ME, CA, OR, HI).
For a post office box, use PO Box and the number.
For street abbreviations, use the standards: Ave., St., Terr., Cir., Blvd., etc.
For streets using directions such as northeast or southwest, use NE, SW, NW, SE, E., W., etc.
I can't think of what else would be punctuated in the inside address.
Use a comma after Rd. It should be --- 123 Smith Rd., Suite A
"Once we get inside, David said you can take your boots off."
Clemson University, att: brandy page, 110 Daniel Parkway, Clemson, SC 29206
Apostrophe
I will punctuate this sentence.
The inside address is the address where you're going to send the letter to.
inside address
You must punctuate every sentence. You will learn to correctly punctuate sentences when you learn the types of sentences.
The correct way to punctuate the given sentence is: "What has no legs but sometimes runs fast?" asked Mary. The question mark should be inside the quotation marks and followed by a comma before the attribution.
No it is not a rule. You should punctuate as normal.
Q: "How do you punctuate this sentence? "i see a horse do you" A: I see a horse, do you? That is how you correct it, or punctuate.
It should be punctuated the same way you punctuate other quotations.