British versus American style | The Punctuation Guide
For most American writing, stick with no spaces. If you're writing for a British audience or following a specific style guide that allows for spaces, feel free to include them.
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Traditionally, curly (or so-called “smart”) quotes have had a use distinct from straight (also called “regular” or the not-so-nice “dumb”) quotes. Pairs of the former are used to enclose quoted material—and they’re “smart” enough to know when to open a quote and when to close it, hence the moniker—while the latter should be reserved for, say, the
... See moreEmmy J. Favilla • A World Without "Whom"

Prompting Midjourney --v 6 is VERY different than prompting --v 5
--v 6 understands language much better, which means your punctuation, syntax, & grammar matter much more
If prompted correctly, you can control almost every element in your image
A guide to... See more