Unfortunately no. You can however make a parody of that song title. And you might be able to if the song title is a generic word.
Honestly i think you can.
"How do you hold a moonbeam in your hand" is a lyric from the song "How do you solve a problem" which appears in the movie "Sound of Music". It is actually physically impossible to hold a moonbeam in your hand.
Sure. It is still necessary to distinguish the text as a title of a work. The quotation marks do that. The fact that the song title uses parentheses or that you have used the song title in a parenthetical expression does not matter. Use the quotes to identify it as a song title.
You can use Windows Movie Maker. All you need to do is.... 1. Pick a song. 2. Drag it to the timeline. 3. Go to Titles and Credits. 4. Copy the lyrics from a lyrics website. And you are done! Hopefully this helped!
Italics(:
yes you can. you probably need permission though but if you wrote it you don't need to. Hope that helps!
No, a chorus is not a lyric poem. A chorus is a repeated section of a song or play that typically expresses a central theme or emotion, while a lyric poem is a type of poem that expresses personal thoughts and emotions.
John Kay wrote and sang the song "Give Me Some News I Can Use". John Kay wrote and sang the song "Give Me Some News I Can Use". John Kay wrote and sang the song "Give Me Some News I Can Use".
you underline it because you cant you a quotation mark to present a book or the title of a movie.
yes.
Song titles don't necessarily follow normal grammatical rules. An artist can decide to use a question mark or not. If you are referencing a song title then you should check what the artist uses for the title.