Example: I think of a poem by Jia Dao in the Tang Dynasty: "But through these clouds, how do I know which corner of the mountain it is facing?" ."
2. If the quotation is incomplete or used as part of the writing, the period will be put outside quotation marks or not used.
There are two situations:
(1) There is no need to pause before the quotation mark ends, so there cannot be any punctuation after it.
For example, "looking down on a thousand fingers and bowing down as a willing ox" is a portrayal of Mr. Lu Xun's actions.
(2) The quotation marks only need to stop at the end, so the period should follow the quotation marks.
Example: Alleys, springs, green grass and moss have all become elusive shadows-it can really be said that "dreams are deep and deep, and every street and lane is always close to love".
Extended data
On punctuation marks
1. Strictly speaking, all written works must be punctuated, but modern poetry has formed a trend of omitting punctuation. Omitting punctuation marks is an irregular behavior, especially in poems that need to be unconventional. For example, "injured bird let me touch your wings" should be "injured bird, let me touch your wings." (Red Leaves "Love")
2. Punctuation marks can not only be omitted, but also can not be used indiscriminately, and those that should not be punctuated can not be used indiscriminately. Take "wounded bird, let me touch your wings" as an example: you can't deliberately write "wounded bird, let me touch your wings"; Or "wounded bird, let me touch your wings and arms". If words with special meanings need to be separated, you can "borrow" dashes.