No, movie titles are underlined or italicised.
. But if u typing u have to use
Yes From Bob baritone
No. Movie titles should be underlined or italicized.
You do whatever the style guide for the publication you're writing for says to do. However, probably the most common form for titles of works (such as movies) is to put it in italics. If you can't do that (because you're using a typewriter or something that doesn't do italics), the most common is to underline them. Quotation marks might be used if you could do neither of the above.
Yes, I believe that is the proper way to do it. You put the title of the movie in italics, and the year it was made in parentheses. For example, the Sixth Sense (1999) or Forrest Gump (1994).However, if it is a short film, then I believe you are supposed to put the title in quotations instead of italics. Similar to how titles of novels are italicized, while titles of short stories are put in quotation marks.
Yes. For episodes you use quotation marks; for TV shows you underline or italicize.
If you are writing something else and referring to an essay you have written, you would put the title of that essay in quotation marks, but the title at the top of your essay (like the title of any document) should not have quotation marks.
Yes, you should put quotation marks around a sermon title when it is mentioned in written text to distinguish it as a title.
Yes, you should put quotation marks around the title of a speech, just like you would for the title of an article or a chapter in a book.
No, you put the title in quotation marks.
Yes; the article title should be placed inside quotation marks, while the name of the newspaper or magazine is italicized.
YES
you can put it in quotation marks or underline it
In the quotation marks.
Put song titles and poems in quotation marks. Jaymer aka Jking
Yes, I believe so. If not, you only need to put it into italics.
Yes From Bob baritone
Place the titles of articles in quotation marks, but italicize the title of magazines or books the articles appear in.You can do either that or put it in quotation marks, though the MLA standard is to underline the title.