It is usually desirable to make titles and quotations stand out from your own text. So saying The Sunday Times article The Price of Fish achieves this objective quite well. But it is not obligatory - it is a matter of choice.
Titles of articles and short poems go in quotation marks; the titles of books, journals, and magazines are underlined when the paper is handwritten. As of 2007, MLA now says that all titles when standing alone in the text are italicized.
However, if you are referring to a part of a work like a selection from an anthology and the anthology's title is included in the text of your work then the selection is in quotes and the book is in italics.
EX: Smith's essay The Ones We Love is a compelling read.
or
EX: Smith's essay "The Ones We Love" in his book Too Many to Count is a compelling read.
Unfortunately there is no specific answer that we can give to this, it depends completely on the referencing system you're using and if your organisation/institution have made changes to it. Many universities in the UK use modified versions of the Harvard referencing system.
It would be better to put this question to someone in your organization such as a project head.
Sorry I cant be of more help
Treat titles of periodicals, magazines and newspapers in the same way as titles of books: italicize, put in quotation marks or underline (depending on the general rule in use at your school or college).
Always use quotations when citing an article.
MLA format for quotes less than four lines long = "quote" (author name(space)page #).
DO NOT place a comma between author's name and the page number on which the quote was found, simply space.
Do place a period after the actual citation [ (author name(space)page#). ]
MLA format for quotes longer than four lines = Inset block quote.
Tab over an inch (10 spaces) and begin the quote without quotation marks.
Continue to keep the quote inset by an inch. Finish without quotation marks.
Simply add the generic (name(space)#).
Remember to introduce your quotes. This can be accomplished by stating the author's degrees ( PhD, MD, etc.) and the university at which they teach or at which they received the degrees. For example : As Dr. Soandso of X University, PhD, states in an article for "Y Quarterly", "quote" (Soandso #).
yes maybe
No
No.
Theres really no difference if your doing a bibliography i suggest just skipping the website title and put S.A for same as article.
Yes; the article title should be placed inside quotation marks, while the name of the newspaper or magazine is italicized.
It depends on the formatting required by your teacher, but in MLA format you italicise the title's of books, but article or essay titles you put in quotation marks. But look up the formatting guides online and they'll tell you more.
Put the title in quotes.
I'm almost positive that you put it in quotes.
No
sometimes
No.
Yes, when referring to the title of a magazine article, it is common practice to put it in quotation marks. This helps to distinguish the title from the rest of the text.
no you have to put it in quotation
no i think you underline it
You put the title of the article instead. :) Ex. She believed television was "a magic box of pictures" (ARTICLE TITLE HERE). lol
Theres really no difference if your doing a bibliography i suggest just skipping the website title and put S.A for same as article.
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.