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Inverted commas

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flipnflap | 16:03 Tue 03rd Apr 2012 | Phrases & Sayings
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Which is the correct way to do inverted commas: [FOR EXAMPLE] 'Her mother said "Let's have tea" and boiled the kettle' OR "Her mother said 'Let's have tea' and boiled the kettle"?
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Her mother said, "Let's have tea," and boiled the kettle.
the 2nd way is completely incorrect lol
Her mother said, "Let's have tea," and told me to put the kettle on. : (
Her mother said, 'Let's have tea.' and boiled the kettle.
or
Her mother said, "Let's have tea." and boiled the kettle.

Personally, I prefer, and use, the latter but I think it's a bit old fashioned now.
capital letter A after a full stop, surely?
A comma to break the sentence, surely ?
Well, the mother's sentence is:- Let's have tea. That should end in a full stop.
Really it should be. Her mother said, "Let's have tea." She then boiled the kettle.
Her mother said, 'Let's have tea.' and boiled the kettle.

Definitely not. The full stop renders the second half meaningless. A comma is needed.
Shouldn't' it be

Her mother said "Let's have tea." and boiled the kettle.
Her mother said, "Let's have tea", and boiled the kettle. Comma outside the quotes. Definitely not a full stop.
I'd say; "Sod the tea it's taking too long, I'll have a glass of water!"
Mother's sentence is:- Let's have tea.
I agree, "let's have tea" is a sentence in it's own right and gets a full stop inside the quotes.
Comma outside the quotes. Definitely not a full stop.

The rule is that any punctuation mark should go after the last word spoken and should therefore be inside the closing quotation marks.
This question started off with inverted commas and now it's all about full stops, commas and sentences.
Mike, You do it your way - I'll stick to mine.
Speech commas, plural, go round the words actually spoken.

This "....."

Not this '.....'
i would only use two sets of inverted commas if a person was saying something containing speech by a third party:

'My mother said "Let's have tea" and then she boiled the kettle,' Jane said.
Chuck. No apostrophe in "it's" when it is the posessive.
LOL. Good point, I'll go to the corner :)

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