What are direct and indirect quotations?
Direct quotations are another person’s exact words–either spoken or in print–incorporated into your own writing. Use a set of quotation marks to enclose each direct quotation included in your writing. Use a capital letter with the first word of a direct quotation of a whole sentence. Do not use a capital letter with the first word of a direct quotation of part of a sentence. If the quotation is interrupted and then continues in your sentence, do not capitalize the second part of the quotation. Mr. and Mrs. Allen, owners of a 300-acre farm, said, “We refuse to use that pesticide because it might pollute the nearby wells.” Mr. and Mrs. Allen stated that they “refuse to use that pesticide” because of possible water pollution. “He likes to talk about football,” she said, “especially when the Super Bowl is coming up.” Indirect quotations are not exact words but rather rephrasings or summaries of another person’s words. Do not use quotation marks for indirect quotations. According to their