Quotation marks have a very specific purpose, which is to indicate that something is a quote, meaning that you are repeating something that someone else said previously. For example I might tell you that my father once told me, "always drive on the right side of the road". Let us now think of the words of Benjamin Franklin. "Neither a borrower nor a lender be."
yes you can, just put a coma before the quote.
no, as long as he is not saying that in quotes
Quotes are preceded and followed by quotation marks. Such as "this"...
You put a period at the end of the sentence to indicate that the sentence has ended.
At the end of an imperative sentence you put a period, because it is a command, direction, or request.
at the end of a sentence
At the end of this sentence we had to put a period.
Yes, you would still put a period at the end of the sentence, even if it ends with an acronym. This helps to indicate the end of the sentence clearly.
Question mark (?) is put at the end of a sentence to indicate that it is a question.
At the end of the sentence.
The question should be: Is a period placed inside or outside of close quotes at the end of a sentence? It depends on the style guide you're using, and whether your publication is to be official in the 'American English' or 'British English'. In American English, you'll place the period inside the close quotes. In British English, you'll place the period outside the close quotes.
So you puR period after a website link if at end of sentence