No, the Pledge of Allegiance is typically not placed in quotation marks when written out in text. It is treated as a formal statement or declaration rather than a direct quote. However, if you are quoting someone who recited the pledge or discussing it in a specific context, you might use quotation marks in that case.
In meetings, protocol dictates that the invocation come first IF AND ONLY IF the invocation is EXPLICITLY a prayer. If the invocation is an inspirational quote or such, it comes after the pledge.
Put a quotation mark at the beginning of the quote and at the end of the quote. You do not need to put quotation marks around each sentence within that quote.
A quote which is incorporated within a sentence where it makes sense with the rest of the sentence.
a direct quote should have inverted commas around it "just like this sentence"
Please quote accurately from your source.
You can quote me on that.
To effectively integrate a quote into a sentence, you should introduce it with a signal phrase, use quotation marks around the exact words, and provide proper citation to give credit to the original source.
You only capitilize the first word if it is a capital in the original. If you are quoting from the middle of a sentence, just put in quotation marks, a few dots, and then begin the quote. eg: "...or not to be: that is the question."
"You can start a sentence with a quote," the teacher said, "and there is certainly nothing wrong with doing so."
Yes, you can start a sentence with a quote in an essay, but it is important to properly introduce and integrate the quote into your writing to maintain clarity and coherence.
A phrase is an unfinished sentence or a quote.