One key quotation that supports the thesis that Pip realizes wealth is not connected to good character is when Pip finally sees through the shallow and materialistic nature of Miss Havisham and Estella, and understands that their wealth does not make them genuinely good people. This realization is evident in Pip's reflective comment, "I only saw in them a much better way in the light of their unworldliness than I had seen in Miss Havisham" (Chapter 39).
No; they are written in the following format: Character name: Character speech And so on.
Yes, there should be quotation marks around a sentence followed by "she thought" to indicate that it is the character's thoughts. This helps differentiate the narration from the character's inner dialogue.
A dialogue paragraph may consist soley of dialog or a quotation reflecting conversations. Soliloquy is speaking thoughts aloud by a character in a play. This could also be a paragraph soley of dialog or a quotation.
In general, no. Quotation marks are used to indicate direct speech or a quotation from a text. Thoughts are usually presented without quotation marks in writing. If you are writing a story or narrative where you want to explicitly show a character's thoughts, you can use techniques like italics or inner monologue to convey this, rather than quotation marks.
"Jeff believed every word of his own stories."
Quotation marks are not necessary when indicating a character's thoughts in a story. It is common to use italics to show a character's inner dialogue or thoughts without the need for quotation marks.
The character '' is called an apostrophe. It is commonly used to indicate possession or to form contractions in words.
It's a character in George Orwell's novel. The title of the novel is 1984.
no.you put the thoughts they are thinking in italics such as: i was afraid.hope this helps
The quotation "To be or not to be, that is the question" can be found in William Shakespeare's play "Hamlet". It is spoken by the title character, Prince Hamlet, in the famous soliloquy from Act 3, Scene 1.
If you mean that he thought the words "it is cold" then yes. If you mean that it was cold in his opinion, but he didn't necessarily think those specific words, then no. You use quotation marks the same way that you would if somebody was speaking out loud.
Not necessarily, if it is the start of a sentence or if it is a word that is usually capitalised, you would. But if it is a quote and you start say in the middle of the sentence then you don't.