"No." Ms Elliot replied, "you may not go"
Yes, a sentence with a quoted statement can have a comma outside the quotation marks if the comma is not part of the original quoted material. For example: She said, "I will be there tomorrow."
Yes,
No, a quotation should be closed with a punctuation mark such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point, depending on the context of the sentence. A comma should not be used to close a quotation.
If they are part of the title, they will go within the quotation marks.
In American English punctuation rules, a comma typically comes before the closing quotation mark when the comma is part of the overall sentence. In British English, the comma comes after the closing quotation mark.
Why indeed? In British English punctation it goes outside ...
No, the quotation marks go after the comma or period.
Words within a sentence, after a comma or semi-colon, are not capitalized, except where the direct quote (quotation marks) is used, or for a proper name.
Return to sender does not require quotation marks or a comma.
I'm assuming that you are referring to the comma that would usually occur after the quotation if the sentence was continued, such as, "'Did you have lunch today?' his mother inquired." In that case, the answer is no: the question mark will suffice. If you were referring to a comma that would come before the question, though, as in, "His mother inquired, 'Did you have lunch today?'", the answer is yes, because standard grammatical rules for any sentence apply. As a side note, thank-you for saying 'quotation' instead of 'quote'!
Quotation marks are correctly used in the sentence: She said, "I will be there at 5 PM." This usage indicates that the words within the quotation marks are a direct quote from what she said. Proper placement of punctuation, such as the comma before the quote, is also observed.
In American English, an exclamation point should be placed inside quotation marks, followed by a comma if necessary: He shouted, "Stop!" In British English, the exclamation point would be placed outside of the quotation marks: He shouted, "Stop"!