Originally Posted by Garnabby View Post
Originally Posted by monet View Post
Imagine being Robert A. Nersesian and having to deal with a bunch of lunatics calling him about a dispute from VegasCasinoTalk.
---> National Register of Historic Places listings in Devils Tower National Monument.

https://anagram-solver.net/Imagine%2...0?partial=true


Monet, the period goes after, unless the phrase is a full sentence. Ask any English teacher. Besides, it just looks stupid, the way that you did it above.



Garnabby
Garnabby is online now
Gold
Garnabby's Avatar

Join Date
Aug 2020
Posts
741 ---> Just text 741741
I have to disagree here. If you are using American English, as opposed to British (English) English, the period goes inside the quotation marks.

The following is from Grammarly.com but if you google the rule is pretty clear.

Do commas and periods go inside or outside quotation marks?
Commas and periods always go inside the quotation marks in American English; dashes, colons, and semicolons almost always go outside the quotation marks; question marks and exclamation marks sometimes go inside, sometimes stay outside.



In British English it is the opposite with some exceptions. Garnabby--if you are in Canada I am not sure which would be correct but I assume your way would be correct.

OOOPS--didn't see Monet response above.