Honestly, it varies in the person who will see it. For example, in my English Lit. coursework our teacher told us to italise the title of the book but not the author. However, in my history coursework we were told to underline the ttle of the book. Essentially, I suppose, it comes down to personal preference but make sure you do one or the other!
An underline!An underline!An underline!An underline!
You should include the source attribution for quoted information either within the text where the quote appears or in a footnote at the bottom of the page. Additionally, it is important to provide a full citation for the source in the references or works cited section of your article.
To get an underline on oldMSN you have to be in a conversation and then you go to font then there will be a choice to underline it.
You can underline an email address by pressing Enter in many email applications. You can also underline it by highlighting it and selecting the underline function.
To cite a primary source from a secondary source in Chicago style, include the original source in your bibliography and in-text citation, followed by "quoted in" and the secondary source information.
A) Reintroduce the source whenever you use it, no matter how closely together the quotations lie. B) Cite the source of every quoted passage C) Cite the source of every quoted passage unless a single final citation will lead the reader to all the quoted material D) Use quotation marks around all passages copied verbatim from the source ((Answer) E) Certainly C and D, but A and B only if the reader would otherwise be confused about your use of another's ideas or the source of the ideas.
yes you do underline it because titles are called pronouns which so you do underline.
yup you have to underline charities
You underline it
only the characters in the cell
You can either use italics or an underline.
only the characters in the cell