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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.
As a general rule, a full stop is not used at the end of a displayed title, heading, subheading or caption in scholarly English prose. Some table headings are very long, so when a table heading consists of more than one sentence, a full stop should be used after each sentence, including the final one.
Full stop: A complete sentence ends with either a full stop (also known as a period), an exclamation mark, or a question mark. They are the three end marks and all have the same purpose as a full stop. If one of these is not present, then the sentence is not complete.
A full stop is mostly used at the end of a declarative sentence, or a statement that is considered to be complete. This punctuation mark is also used following an abbreviation. A full stop can also be show the end of a group of words that don't form a typical sentence.
RULE 1: In the American system, periods and commas always go inside quotation marks (i.e., single AND double).
Meaning: You don't want to keep going back and forth all night. In texting, you don't have to end a sentence with any punctuation. It's totally acceptable to just let it dangle. So using a period gives a certain air of finality to a statement. Periods end things.
The use of the period is one example of situational code-switching: When using one in a text message, it's perceived as overly formal. So when you end your text with a period, it can come across as insincere or awkward, just like using formal spoken language in a casual setting like a bar.
Though periods can still signal the end of a sentence in a text message, many users will omit them (especially if the message is only one sentence long). But when the researchers then tested the same messages in handwritten notes, they found that the use of a period didn't influence how the messages were perceived.
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