No, You only put quotation marks around short stories, songs, poems, chapters, articles, other parts of magazines and other parts of books.
No
sometimes
Put the title in quotes.
no i think you underline it
Yes, you either italicize it or put quotes around the art title. Example: "Starry Night"
QUOTES TITLE FACTS These are three main things you should have.
Depends on what format you are using. MLA underlines titles. Chicago puts them in quotes. If this is for a class find out what format your teacher or school uses.
yes you can, just put a coma before the quote.
Here's a rule to use in school: When it's LONG it gets a LINE When it's QUICK it gets a QUOTE. Italics are often substituted for lines - check w/your teacher. So, Title of books - line; chapters in books, quotes. CD or Album - line; individual songs, quotes. TV shows - lines; episodes, quotes.
Put quotes around the name of the poem. I'm not sure about long poems though, I'm looking into it currently.
It is underlined under MLA rules or in italics under the APA rules, but never in qoutation marks. Quotation marks are used for quoting text from books, short story titles, articles in periodicals or reference works, etc.
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.