The teacher even put it in
quotation marks so that we would know it was a direct quote.
Be sure to put them in
quotation marks so you are searching for a phrase.
Not exact matches
«The Netherlands, the
so - called capital of democracy, and I say this in
quotation marks because they are actually the capital of fascism...,» he said in a speech on Sunday.
Well, I added
quotation marks to help you catch onto the sarcasm since you missed it in the Tiger Toe thread,
so really I dumbed it down a bit.
Curious that Democrats can be described as progressive, without qualification, while pro-life gets
quotation marks and is prefixed by «
so - called» or «self - described».
Sadly the term «Christian» (with or without the
quotation marks) has
so many different meanings to different people.
I left the
quotation marks around the original remark from HawaiiGuest from when you quoted him / her,
so yes, you did say that.
Whoever prefers to put the name of «Jesus» always in
quotation marks and let it stand as an abbreviation for the historical phenomenon with which we are concerned, is free to do
so.
This poll of «experts» (I was one of them,
so I put the phrase in
quotation marks advisedly), measuring the effectiveness of MPs, offered a chance to get to grips with this question.
The anamorphic widescreen transfer of the feature film on disc one isn't quite
so lovely as the packaging; the print exhibits some scratches and the subtitles (which, thankfully, are on the bottom black bar,
so as to get a clearer view of the picture) have a strange tendency to sport
quotation marks at random, but the flaws won't ruin one's enjoyment of the film.
In addition, you will expect students to use correct punctuation —
quotation marks, commas, and
so on — in the conversations they write.
So you have, in
quotation marks «lost that $ 5».
Plagiarism can also mean not putting
quotation marks around a quote, buying essays that someone else has written, copying a sentence and its structure but changing just a few words, or using
so many ideas or words from a source that it makes up the majority of your work.
This Q&A is paraphrased,
so I am not using
quotation marks, but I think the spirit of the discussing carries through.
Recurrent throughout 8 Painters are stylings on past painterly
marks and movements, not
so much placed in
quotations as absorbed into a work's facture... It's a hopeful sign that the artists in [the show] demonstrate a critical distillation of influences that inform their particular sensibilities, philosophical outlooks, and relationship to materials — not making any great claims, just proceeding in a personally deliberate way.»
(Then again,
so would be leaving the comma and
quotation marks off of the thought directive, but I can only be needlessly pedantic about one thing at a time.)
Recurrent throughout 8 Painters are stylings on past painterly
marks and movements, not
so much placed in
quotations as absorbed into a work's facture.
Tomma Abts (at David Zwirner from September 10th through October 25th) dispenses with the
quotation marks seemingly placed
so often around a good amount of contemporary «painting» in a way that humbles.
By the way, I've never used the phrase «sinister cabal of Trotskyites»,
so please don't put
quotation marks around it as if it's mine.
Unfortunately, it isn't quite
so simple that the use of
quotation marks denotes fake skepticism.
One can «take action» by using
quotation marks, but many copied passages require
so many changes that
quotation marks are impractical.
Single and double
quotation marks: In the UK, single
quotation marks (usually called «inverted commas») are the default, with anything quoted within a
quotation going in double
quotation marks, like
so: She said, «The bus driver told me, «You can't bring such a large animal onto the bus, madam», but in the end he let me.»
A password like «tarheels # 1», for instance (excluding the
quotation marks) frequently became «tArheels # 1» after the first change, «taRheels # 1» on the second change and
so on.
Quotation marks are, if I may say
so, the most «misused» punctuation
mark in the English language.
Placing every misuse of
quotation marks into a specific category is difficult,
so we'll use this Twitter
quotation -
mark abuse poll (thanks to all who voted) as a starting point.
But for lawyers,
quotation -
mark abuse may not be
so bad.
According to Garner, lawyers should use
quotation marks only to quote someone, to refer to a word as a word (e.g., the word «that»), and to mean «
so - called - but - not - really.»
It's the problem of indentations in the text, as it appears on the screen — markng
quotations rather than using quote
marks — vanishing when the job is printed,
so one loses track of what was... [more]
It's the problem of indentations in the text, as it appears on the screen — markng
quotations rather than using quote
marks — vanishing when the job is printed,
so one loses track of what was the
quotation and what's part of the new reasons.
Bar v. Della — Donna, 583
So.2 d 307, 310 (Fla. 1989)(citations and internal
quotation marks omitted).