Answer: Use the evidence below to find your answer.
Explanation: Introduce the quotation with a complete sentence and a colon. (Colons follow independent clauses - clauses that could stand alone as sentences and can be used to present an explanation, draw attention to something, or join ideas together.)
Use an introductory or explanatory phrase, but not a complete sentence, separated from the quotation with a comma.
Make the quotation a part of your own sentence without any punctuation between your own words and the words you are quoting.
Periods and commas ALWAYS go inside quotation marks.
Examples: The sign said, "Walk." Then it said, "Don't Walk," then, "Walk," all within thirty seconds. He yelled, "Hurry up."
Answer:
One sharp difficulty presented itself. In the intervening twenty-five years my name had become reasonably well known.
Explanation:
In the book by John Steinbeck, <em>Travels with Charley, </em>the author describes the road trip he took in 1960 around America with his dog Charley because he wanted to have a view of his country on a more intimate level, a different perspective.
The statement that showed that there was a problem was the fact that Mr Steinbeck was quite popular and as such was recognized by quite a number of people.
In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Wiesel states that silence is not neutral. That, by trying to remain "unbiased" and not picking a side, you are choosing the side of the oppressor.
He believes that not helping is as bad as participating; and that, when it comes to human suffering, everyone should raise their voices to help those in need, regardless of their race and nationality.