It depends on the style guide you are following. In general, it is common to italicize the names of churches in written text.
Scientific names are composed of the GENUS name, which is capitalized, and the species name, which is always lower case. The entire scientific name is ALWAYS underlined or italicized.
Names of airplanes, ships, all vessels are underlined or italicized.
Yes, genus and species names are typically italicized when written in scientific papers, articles, or any formal scientific writing to indicate that they are in Latin. In handwritten documents or when italics are not available, the names can be underlined.
No it should not be italicized. If you are referring to a specific train then it should be capitalized. If the name of the train appears in a title of an article, book etc then it should be italicized in that case.
Yes, movies are either underlined or italicized.
In APA style, names of magazines are italicized rather than underlined.
The names of books and other large works are underlined or italicized.
That is correct. In MLA style, titles of books are italicized rather than underlined when citing them in text.
Magazines are typically italicized rather than underlined or placed in quotation marks. For example, "National Geographic" or Time.
In an APA citation, the author's name is typically underlined or italicized. The title of the source being cited is also underlined or italicized in the reference list.
No, if a title of a novel is handwritten, it should be italicized instead of underlined. Underlining is used in handwritten work to show that the text should be italicized in printed work.
Novels are typically italicized when mentioned in a sentence or paragraph. However, if you are hand-writing the title, you would underline it.