If you are writing by hand, then yes you underline it, but if you are typing, you need to italicize it.
No.
you underline it because you cant you a quotation mark to present a book or the title of a movie.
you underline the title of the movie
yes or italicize it
On the computer it is in italics but when you are writing it you underline it quotes are for a specific scene in the movie
No.
you underline it because you cant you a quotation mark to present a book or the title of a movie.
you underline the title of the movie
yes or italicize 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.
No, you do not underline a DVD title. It is typically formatted in italics or bold to indicate it is a title.
You underline it
On the computer it is in italics but when you are writing it you underline it quotes are for a specific scene in the movie
No, in APA style, you should not underline the book title in the bibliography. Instead, you should italicize the title of the book.
You can either use italics or an underline.
== == == == The more common use is to italicize the title, but you can underline it if you wish. Italicizing is preferred and more common. According to Wikipedia's naming conventions, you underline or italicize the title of a film. However, this convention is not standard practice in major periodicals and newspapers, where it is correct to place double quotation marks around movie titles.
To be gramatically correct, yes. You do italicize the title of a movie. (As well as books.) But if you're using something that can't use italics (such as a typewriter), you're supposed to underline it.