You underline only the title of the work, not the author's name.
No, but you can italicize the title of his or her book. Example: "Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women."
No, you do not underline the authors name only the book title.
If you are writing by hand in MLA style, then yes, but typed MLA is just italics.
No but the title of their work should be italicized.
No.
No. even if it is the name of a symphony, you still don't
Zac Brown
that is his first name. his full name is Usher Raymond.
They all have names so, yes ;-)
=Rodney Atkins==also Rodney Crowell=
underline the name of a magazine but quote the names of the articles.
Yes, you should always underline the name of something, except the names of people.
No i dont know the answer
No you do not
YES!
No.
No
It is not necessary to underline the name of academic journals when referring to them as references. Proper APA format calls for listing the name, but not underlining it.
No, you do not need to underline the name of a candy. Instead, you can simply capitalize it if needed for emphasis or use quotation marks when referencing the specific candy by name in a sentence.
On the web underlines usually mean that the text is a link. If your blog name doesn't link to anything then it's probably best not to underline it.
No, you do not underline a movie name in a paper. Instead, you should italicize the movie name to indicate it is a title.
An underline!An underline!An underline!An underline!