You would not need to use quotation marks or need to underline Petronella. It is her name.
No, you underline Novels and books
No. You put " " quotation marks around it.
You would put quotation marks around radio shows because they are talking.
No- although sometimes it is important and proper grammar to underline, italicize, or put quotation marks around the title.
Yes. For episodes you use quotation marks; for TV shows you underline or italicize.
No, but you do put quotation marks around it and write who your quoting from.
Company names are not underlined, nor are quotation marks put around them. They are written as normal proper nouns unless there are underlines or quotation marks in the name itself.
You would underline or italicize the name of the book on tape rather than use quotation marks.
No, you would underline or italicize a painting, or a work of art. (you would underline it if you were writing but if you were typing, you should italicize it.)According to MLA formatting, paintings and major works are either underlined or italicized. Smaller works -- such as photographs -- require only quotation marks.but the correct answer for this question is put theses things in a quotation mark setting.
You would typically use quotation marks to indicate that the text is a direct quote from a presidential speech. Underlining is not commonly used for this purpose in modern writing styles.
When formally writing the title of anything (book, newspaper article, name of website, and even shows), you should always underline it and put quotation marks around it. Specific episodes of a show or specific chapters in a book however, do not get underlined.
The proper usage will be based on the specific style manual being followed. In most cases the program would only be capitalized.