Quotation Marks
Quotation Marks
In the United States, periods and commas go inside quotation marks regardless of
logic. Click HERE for an explanation (sort of).
In the United Kingdom, Canada, and islands under the influence of British education,
punctuation around quotation marks is more apt to follow logic. In American style, then,
you would write: My favorite poem is Robert Frost's "Design." But in England you
would write: My favorite poem is Robert Frost's "Design". The placement of marks other
than periods and commas follows the logic that quotation marks should accompany (be
right next to) the text being quoted or set apart as a title. Thus, you would write (on either
side of the Atlantic):
Further, punctuation around quoted speech or phrases depends on how it fits into the
rest of your text. If a quoted word or phrase fits into the flow of your sentence without a
break or pause, then a comma may not be necessary:
The phrase "lovely, dark and deep" begins to suggest ominous overtones.
If the quoted speech follows an independent clause yet could be part of the same
sentence, use a colon to set off the quoted language:
My mother's favorite quote was from Shakespeare: "This above all, to thine
own self be true."
When an attribution of speech comes in the middle of quoted language, set it apart as you
would any parenthetical element:
"I don't care," she said, "what you think about it."
Be careful, though, to begin a new sentence after the attribution if sense calls for it:
Convention normally insists that a new paragraph begins with each change of
speaker:
"I don't care what you think anymore," she said, jauntily tossing back her hair and
looking askance at Edward.
"What do you mean?" he replied.
"What do you mean, 'What do I mean?'" Alberta sniffed. She was becoming
impatient and wished that she were elsewhere.
"You know darn well what I mean!" Edward huffed.
"Have it your way," Alberta added, "if that's how you feel."
In proofreading and editing your writing, remember that quotation marks always
travel in pairs! Well, almost always. When quoted dialogue carries from one paragraph to
another (and to another and another), the closing quotation mark does not appear until the
quoted language finally ends (although there is a beginning quotation mark at the start of
each new quoted paragraph to remind the reader that this is quoted language). Also, in
parenthetical documentation (see the Guide to Writing Research Papers), the period
comes after the parenthetical citation which comes after the quotation mark" (Darling
553).
In reporting "silent speech"—noting that language is "said," but internally and not
spoken out loud—writers are on their own. Writers can put quotation marks around it or
not:
Be careful not to use quotation marks in an attempt to emphasize a word (the kind of
thing you see in grocery store windows—Big "Sale" Today!). Underline or italicize that
word instead. (The quotation marks will suggest to some people that you are using that
word in a special or peculiar way and that you really mean something else—or that your
sale is entirely bogus.)
The American Medical Association Manual of Style (9th ed, 1998) calls misused
quotation marks like this Apologetic Quotation Marks and says:
Quotation marks used around words to give special effect or to indicate irony are usually
unnecessary. When irony or special effect is intended, skillful preparation can take the
place of using these quotes. Resort to apologetic quotation marks or quotation marks
used to express irony only after such attempts have failed, keeping in mind that the best
writing does not rely on apologetic quotation marks. (p 220)
Refer to Capital's Guide for Writing Research Papers and, especially, the English
faculty's Suggestions for Writing Papers for Literature Courses for further help in
handling quotations.
On the other hand, if a question ends with a quoted statement that is not a question, the
question mark will go outside the closing quotation mark.
Who said, "Fame means when your computer modem is broken, the repair
guy comes out to your house a little faster"?
A single question mark will suffice to end a quoted question within a question:
"Didn't he ask, 'What did we do, who preceded you?'" queried Johnson.
Authority for this section: New York Public Library Writer's Guide to Style and Usage HarperCollins: New
York. 1994. 277. Cited with permission, examples our own.
British practice, again, is quite different. In fact, single-quote marks and double-
quote marks are apt to be reversed in usage. Instructors in the U.S. should probably take
this into account when reading papers submitted by students who have gone to school in
other parts of the globe.
In newspapers, single quotation marks are used in headlines where double quotation
marks would otherwise appear.
In some fields, key terms may be set apart with single-quote marks. In such cases,
periods and commas go outside the single-quote marks: