enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Punctuation Inside or Outside Quotation Marks? - Grammar Monster

    www.grammar-monster.com/lessons/quotation...

    In the US, periods and commas are placed inside quotation marks. In the UK, the tendency is to place them outside. Colons and semicolons are placed outside quotations, while question marks and exclamation marks follow the logic of the sentence.

  3. A Complete Guide to Apostrophe Rules | Grammarly

    www.grammarly.com/blog/apostrophe

    An apostrophe is part of the word it belongs to, so it should not be separated from that word by a period, a comma, a question mark, or any other punctuation mark. Can I ask you somethin’ ? “ ’Twas the night before Christmas,” he said.

  4. Does the Comma Go Before or After Quotation Marks? - GRAMMARIST

    grammarist.com/punctuation/comma-before-or-after...

    Comma Rule #1: A comma belongs before the quotation marks when placed after an introductory expression. An introductory expression is a phrase or clause that acts as a qualifying or clarifying statement about the rest of the sentence.

  5. Does Punctuation Go Inside Or Outside Of Quotation Marks?

    www.thesaurus.com/e/grammar/does-punctuation-go...

    1. Periods and commas. In American English, a quote that comes at the end of a sentence will contain a period inside the final quotation marks. Correct: She said, “ Goodbye.” Incorrect: She said, “ Goodbye ”. If a sentence ends with multiple quotes (a quote within a quote), the period is placed within all of the final quotation marks.

  6. How and When To Use Single Quotation Marks - YourDictionary

    www.yourdictionary.com/articles/single-quotation...

    You're probably familiar with quotation marks — those double scoops in the air (“ ”), used before and after we relay something someone said or wrote, verbatim. But what about their slimmer counterparts, the single quotation marks (‘ ’)?

  7. Apostrophe - The Punctuation Guide

    www.thepunctuationguide.com/apostrophe.html

    The general rule is that the possessive of a singular noun is formed by adding an apostrophe and s, whether the singular noun ends in s or not.

  8. FAQ Item - The Chicago Manual of Style Online

    www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/qanda/data/faq/...

    Punctuation. Q. When a plural possessive ends a sentence, where does CMOS recommend that the apostrophe fall—before or after the period? For example: Because UAVs fly relatively close to the ground, their surveillance “footprints” are smaller than the satellites’. Is there a rule in CMOS that covers this? A. Yes.