The jury is still out on this one. For example, Portland State University says you must italicize Web addresses and email addresses in running text; however, the University of Pittsburgh no, there is no need to do that.
I prefer the former as it makes for easier, faster reading---the eye can skip over it quickly and readers who need it later can also find it more easily.
No they are not. In the MLA style (used by liberal arts, humanities, and some journalism professors), you cite author, title, date (if known), and use the word "Web" to show that you found the article online; you do not need to underline the URL, but if you are including it, you should enclose it within angle brackets. < >
The APA style (used in Psychology, Sociology, etc) prefers that you just give the author, year of publication, title, and then state the URL (no brackets, no underlining).
It should be noted that the rules about use of internet citations have changed over the past decade. You may want to consult with the reference librarian at your school library or seek out a reliable online manual of style from the APA or MLA.
Web addresses on a works cited page should not be underlined or italicized. Simply list the URL in regular font.
No, you would underline or italicize a painting, or a work of art. (you would underline it if you were writing but if you were typing, you should italicize it.)According to MLA formatting, paintings and major works are either underlined or italicized. Smaller works -- such as photographs -- require only quotation marks.but the correct answer for this question is put theses things in a quotation mark setting.
When referencing The Canterbury Tales in a paper or essay, you should italicize the title because it is considered a major work. Quotation marks are typically used for shorter works such as poems or short stories.
Yes, if the title of a book is the same as the title of an article, you would italicize it in both cases. This follows standard conventions for titles of longer works like books and articles.
When naming characters from a play in an essay, you should italicize their names. This helps to distinguish them as specific elements of the play and conforms to standard formatting conventions for literary works.
Yes, the names of plays should be italicized when they are mentioned in text. This helps to distinguish the title from the surrounding text and conforms to standard formatting conventions for titles of works in writing.
works cited
Quotations or Italics? In general, titles of individual selections within larger works of music are put in quotation marks; titles of larger works are set in italics (underlined in typescript). Since most ballets are broken into acts, you would italicize the title.
No, you would italicize or underline the name of a painting. If you are using MLA format, then you should underline the name. The way I remember is that quotations go around short works like poems or plays, whereas sculptures and paintings take a long time to create. (Debatable, yes, but it's a helpful mnemonic.)
When writing an essay, it should be in quotation marks because it is a short work. Long works likenovel, film, play, or television series are ether italicized or underlined.
Each time you write the title of a book underline it, or you can italicize it. Quotes are used for smaller works; poetry, articles, short stories, but larger works; books, papers, magazines, get the underline or italics.
u write the singer with last name , first name then a . the " around the song name then a . then underline the album name them , then the record label , and the release year then a . and that's it
When citing a shorter work (essay, magazine or newspaper article, short poem, chapter of a book, one-act play, song, etc.) in your essay, place the title in quotation marks. It is only appropriate to italicize titles of longer works (books, movies, epic poetry, albums, magazines, newspapers, etc.). If, however, you are handwriting your essay, go ahead and underline these titles. That being said, a strict answer to your question is no. You should not underline the title of an essay when using it in your own essay. You should place it in quotation marks.