The syntax highlighter has no knowledge of the Python interactive interpreter format, and interprets the Hello, this is a test.
line as code.
It simply highlighted Hello
as a type (in Python, anything with a capital initial is assumed to be a class or type). Up until this
the line could have been an expression, after all. is
is recognised as a language keyword and highlighted as such.
>>> print (
"Firstword, is highlighted as an identifier. It does not matter if it is\n"
"Hello or something else. \"Quotes\" look like 'strings'.")
Firstword, is highlighted as an identifier. It does not matter if it is
Hello or something else. "Quotes" look like 'strings'.
This is hardly the fault of the language parser however; the interpreter is echoing 'random' text in between valid code and the parser has no way of knowing what is supposed to be code and what is text.
Note that bugs in how a specific language is marked up, should be reported to the Google prettify project, not to Stack Exchange.