What is the best way to split phrase quotation into quotations?
Scientifically Guy
- Rouleau, the director of McGill University’s Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI), is frustrated with how slowly neuroscience research translates into treatment. “We’re in a really shitty job” say Rodrigo. It’s not because we’re not trying; it has to do with the complexity of the problem. What
is the significance of quotation marks over the bald line in the Smrs?
Why do some writers partition sentences and quotations into two parts? Why isn’t it like
- we’re doing a really sarcastic job. Why we’re not doing, but because of the complexity of the problem?
Even if the writer separated them, why didn’t he put after the second part “h he added after a while,’ or “he added”?
- “We’re doing a really great job,” says J.R. d’Amore. “It’s not because we’re not trying, it has to do with the complexity of the problem,” added he after while. What will many new people think about the new regime?
3) And third and last question: could it matter if part of speech has preceded or came after quotation marks, like: He says: “————-” “———-,” he says
source could help
to understand paragraph
construction?
I do like to see articles written with the construction: “A quote, he said. ” What are some more quotes, now from the internet? I
read every day from 1 am through 4 pm, the quote has been done. Starting with the quote is good story-telling since it brings you into that person’s point of view immediately, and inserting the he said after each sentence helps to orient the reader and let them know exactly who is speaking. Is it possible to put the he said all the way at the end of a passage?
Why doesn’t there always need a he added at the end of the paragraph? If the paragraph is continuing, then the reader knows that the same person is continuing to speak, so it’s unnecessary to re-identify the speaker. Again, in case of paragraph with continued paragraphs, it’s a paragraph.
I should note
that English speakers are very familiar with this quoting pattern. We get used to hearing it from a very young age. I should add that I was only just getting absorbed into the quoting pattern. We don’t want to copy just yet. What I’ve been told all my life from Beatrix Potter’s “The Tale of Peter Rabbit”: “Now, my dears!”
Rabbit one morning, “you may go into the fields or down the lane, but don’t go into Mr. McGregor’s garden: your Father had an accident there; he was put in a pie by Mrs. McGregor.” ”
” I just believe that here in India I don’t know that being a good person. All the above is absurd.