Once again, you would never see a sentence such as '
appelle la maison d"Alice' in French. Or only as an improbable error, because this is just plainly incorrect. In French, double quotes or
guillemets are just the same thing as what they are in English and most European languages, i.e. a quoting punctuation character, not a part of the language itself.
What you could see in a French sentence is "appelle la maison d'Alice", with a single quote (or apostrophe) between the "d" letter and the word "Alice".
So your use case still does not make any sense to me.
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