Yes.
For example: "Keep holding on/cause you know we'll make it through, we'll make it through"
Yes, when including song lyrics in a report, you should put them in quotation marks. This will help indicate that the text is taken directly from the song.
No, you underline it. By the way, movie titles are in italics, and songs are in quotation marks.
quotation marks
The lyrics would be most commonly in quotation marks. The title would simply be capitalized.
No, quotation marks are not needed around individual letters when they are used as part of a word or sentence in standard writing. Quotation marks are typically used to indicate a direct quotation or to highlight a specific phrase in writing.
Use single quotation marks to indicate a quote within a quote.If you're using a quote that contains a quote you'll need to surround the embedded quote with single quotation marks.
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.
In the quotation marks.
Punctuation marks such as periods and commas should be placed outside the set of quotation marks. Question marks and exclamation points should be placed inside if they are part of the quoted material, and outside if they are not.
It should be in quotation marks.
No, "in Toto" should not be in quotation marks when used in a sentence. It is a Latin phrase meaning "as a whole" and is typically italicized in formal writing.
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.
" And " are quotation marks and are used to enclose talking in writing