What is the ordering of question and answer marks, closing quotation marks, and citation ?
How do I say that one of my favorite foods is cheese, and this verse is the Book Of Cheese and we are also saying that I like cheese?
Is it:
As it is written, “Do you like cheese? Thanks in advance. Which cheese? If you like cheese What
is
your experience with Book of Cheese? Why?
Do
you like cheese? And indeed, the story
of what went on behind the book of cheese, 43:21, and what happened there?
What causes confusion?
What do people like eating in the book that
you quote?
Permission to change this sentence without using the question mark.
When you quote something like you do here, you used quote marks to identify exactly which words belong to the quote, and then you write, either before or after or in a footnote somewhere, where you have taken the quote from.
What exactly do you quote in the quote marks make it look like it’s in the book of cheese? Do
you like cheese? “Bible
of Cheese”, book 43. Verse 21, does not define what is written in the book. It is part of the sentence you are writing. How do my quote marks look and function if I want to say what I copyed but didn’t want to include it in my e-mail?
Why do you like
cheese? ” ( Book of Cheese, 43:21).
If
an expression is one of closed classes (in English usually articles, particles, prepositions, conjunctions, etc.) it is more customary to use title case when capitalising titles of books and such things — where words belonging to close classes are not capitalised — than to use start case where most words are capitalized. What is the reason why I chose Book of Cheese rather than Book of
Cheese.