When you write the title of a short story in a paper/essay/report/etc., you use quotation marks. Always. Bolding is never necessary unless your teacher/boss/etc. wants it, for some reason, or some style asks for it (definitely not MLA, and probably not APA, though I don't use APA). Underlining is necessary for LONG works such as whole novels/books, magazines, CDs, movie titles, plays, etc., while quotation marks are used for shorter works like specific chapters in a book, songs on a CD, articles in a magazine or online, etc. *If you are writing the title of your OWN short story, paper, etc., you don't need to do anything. It's yours; you're actually TITLING your work, not referring to it. I hope that helps.
Using Italics or Quotation Marks with Titles Both in-text and on the references list, italicize titles of longer works, like books, magazines, entire websites, movies, newspapers, and journals. Use quotation marks around titles of shorter works, such as poems, songs, essays, short stories, print articles, and online articles contained within larger websites (APA, 2001, pp. 82, 100). Titles of Longer Works: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, National Geographic, New York Times Titles of Shorter Works: "The Road Not Taken", "My Love Don't Cost a Thing", "One Moment in Time" This is right from a APA handbook
You can underline if you want. It just matters what looks better in your point of view. If you decide not to underline, make the title bigger so they know it's the title and not part of the song.
Titles of books should be italicized or underlined.
You can do either one, they're both acceptable.
Just don't do both at the same time! :)
you can either underline it or italicize it
yes
yes
no
You underline it if you are hand writing and italicize if you are typing.
No, in APA style, you should not underline the book title in the bibliography. Instead, you should italicize the title of the book.
No, you underline it.
When writing an essay or similar piece, it is conventional to underline the title of a book or other text each time it is written.This helps to distinguish whether the writer is referring to a text, or an element found within the text (for example, the name of a character).
Yes, book titles are typically italicized or underlined to indicate emphasis. However, in modern writing and with the use of word processing software, it is more common to italicize book titles rather than underline them.
Qutation marks for essays, short stories, poems, movies underline for book titles
Book titles are always underlined. On the computer though, you can italicize it.
You underline only the title of the work, not the author's name.
In a book report, you would italicize the title of a book, not underline it. When referencing a poem in your report, you would typically use quotation marks for its title. For example, "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost.
The title of a book should be written with the first letter of all important words, as well as the first word, capitalized, and the entire title underlined. Underline a book title when written by hand and italicize when typed. Example: Lord of Light
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
In academic writing, poems are typically put in quotation marks. If you are referencing the title of a longer poem or collection, you may italicize it instead. Ultimately, the formatting rules may vary depending on the style guide you are following.