Yes.
Yes, if the question is a complete sentence and the citation follows the question within the same sentence, you would typically place a period after the closing parenthesis of the citation to end the sentence.
Simple. I live in Middle America.
you would put it after
Yes, in APA style, the period for a sentence comes before the internal citation. This means that your sentence should end with a period, followed by the internal citation. For example: "This is a sample sentence." (Author, Year).
To put a citation in MLA format correctly, include the author's last name and the page number in parentheses at the end of the sentence where the information is used. Additionally, include a Works Cited page at the end of your paper with the full citation details for each source used.
the police officer gave a citation
when you put the word 'cholera' in the beginning of the sentence, like: Cholera is a disease.
The Shiek's encampment was inthe middle of an oasis.
If you have a quote in the middle of the sentence then don't put a period there, put a comma, an exclamation mark, or a question mark. If it is at the end of a sentence then put a period inside the quotation marks.
When you mail letters, write the recipient in the middle of the envelope.
A narrative citation is when the author's name is mentioned in the text, while a parenthetical citation is when the author's name and publication year are in parentheses at the end of the sentence.
I am in the middle of a sentence.