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So the Australian Style manual specifies that superscript is placed within punctuation except for at the end of a sentence, where it falls outside of the full stop. All well and good, but how about in the circumstance when the (complete) sentence ends with a colon that precedes a block quote? Does the superscript fall inside or outside of the colon?

I guess the question is whether the colon, in this case, constitutes the 'end of the sentence'.

choster
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1 Answers1

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Superscripts always fall within punctuation, unless you can cite a specific reason why not.

Except a following sentence, which won't be a superscript, nothing relating to a sentence should fall outside - or rather, after - the full stop.

It’s almost impossible for a sentence, much less a complete sentence, to end with a colon, whatever it precedes. When a colon is appropriate, whether a superscript falls before or after it depends on the circumstance, not any absolute rule.

If the Australian Style Manual says superscripts should be placed within punctuation except at the end of a sentence that could be well and good.

When you guess the question is whether the colon constitutes the end of the sentence which colon and which sentence did you mean to quote, please?

  • Purdue Owl gives an example of a colon ending a sentence when it introduces a block quote (unless you think the entire paragraph comprising the block quote is contained in the sentence). This is the kind of thing the OP is asking about. – Peter Shor Jul 06 '17 at 23:53
  • Thanks, Peter, and although Purdue Owl nearly put me to sleep, that link didn't seem to help.

    I do think it makes no difference whether one word or 1,000 follows the colon: whatever does is is contained in the sentence.

    There might be a problem with whether the OP meant … at the end… or after the end of a sentence and otherwise, what d'you think isn't clear, please?

    – Robbie Goodwin Jul 08 '17 at 23:45