For example, which one of these is the correct usage?:
I asked Joe, "What are you doing tonight?"
I asked Joe, "What are you doing tonight"?
I asked Joe, "What are you doing tonight?".
Or how about this one:
I told my wife, "I am going to the store."
I told my wife, "I am going to the store".
I told my wife, "I am going to the store.".
Here's what I found:
WikiAnswers wrote:There is a difference between US and British/Canadian punctuation styles. (In the US, periods and commas always appear inside the quotation marks, although question marks follow the same logic logic as below.)
* BRITISH / CANADIAN PUNCTUATION : the punctuation follows the logic below,
If you are quoting a question then the ? will go within the quotation marks.
I.e. Sally said, "Where are you going?"
If you re asking a question about a quote, then the ? will go after the quotation marks.
I.e. Did Sally say, "We are going to the zoo"?
There is no double punctuation used.
For periods, if the quotation marks enclose a sentence, it goes inside. If the quotation marks do not use a period, the period goes outside.
I.e. -- The boy said "I am going to the store."
But -- The show was was titled "My Town".
I know, this will be boring to some, and a lightbulb finally turning on for others. I am glad to have finally put this question to rest, as I have always wondered about it.
