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Lynn W
2014-06-19
The complaint has a First Count, Second Count, Third Count and Fourth Count. The form did not allow editing of the formatting to insert space for identifying the "Count" being addressed. Otherwise, the form was fine.
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2018-06-19
I has made my job easier. I use numerous forms as a Clinical Manager for a Home health agency that does not utilize EMR. I am now able to fill out these forms in half the time. I don't have to look through countless paper folders to locate my forms, just locate on my desk top, complete and print!
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2 Answers. Headlines are basically titles, and the reason periods aren't usually put in titles is: Full stops, like their name suggests, are something that halts the eye of your reader. Titles are all about leading your reader into your post and so anyway [sic] that you can help this flow is a bonus.
In all cases of usage involving quotation marks (again, American usage, not British), commas and periods always go inside the quotation marks while semicolons and colons always go outside. Here is an example using a list of titles: Notice that the commas separating the titles are inside the quotation marks.
Commas and periods always go inside the quotation marks in American English. Dashes, colons, and semicolons almost always go outside the quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation marks sometimes go inside, sometimes stay outside.
In American usage, commas and periods at the end of quotes always go inside the quotation marks. In British usage, they can go either inside or outside (in the same way as questions marks and exclamation points in American style, see below).
Capitalization of titles of works (books, articles, plays, stories, poems, movies, etc.) Italicize titles of works (books, magazines, newspapers, movies, plays, and CDs). Use quotation marks for shorter works (book chapters, articles, poems, and songs).
If you start by telling who said it, use a comma and then the first quotation mark. If you put the quote first and then tell who said it, use a comma at the end of the sentence, and then the second quotation mark. Punctuation always goes inside the quotation marks if it is a direct quote.
In American English, we always put a period after an abbreviation. It doesn't matter whether the abbreviation is the first two letters of the word (as in Dr. for Drive) or the first and last letter (as in Dr. for Doctor).
Commas should sometimes be placed before and after names and titles. It all depends on the context. Let's start with the fact that unless a name or title is the last word(s) in a sentence, it can either be used with no commas at all, OR with a comma both before and after.
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