Underline the text within an italicized title.
Yes, if the title of a book is the same as the title of an article, you would italicize it in both cases. This follows standard conventions for titles of longer works like books and articles.
Yes, that makes it grammatically correct.
In a citation, you should not italicize the title of an article, book, or journal. You should italicize the title of the journal or book, but not the title of the article itself.
Italicize it.
No, you underline it.
Yes, the title of a scholarly journal should be italicized when cited in the text of a paper or article. This helps to differentiate it from the surrounding text and follow proper citation formatting guidelines.
no because once you write it u can't rube it out
You underline it if you are hand writing and italicize if you are typing.
Quotations for article titles. Italics and underlining are for full books - and the titles of journals.
Book titles are always underlined. On the computer though, you can italicize it.
If this is for a paper, remember to italicize the book title. That will help differentiate between mentions of the character themselves and mentions of the title.
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).
no
Italicize or underline the title.