no you have to put it in quotation
To write a magazine title in your paper, you should italicize the title. For example, if the magazine's title is "National Geographic," you would write it as National Geographic in your paper to indicate that it is a title.
No, underlining the title of an article makes it look like a hyperlink, emboldening the title would be best.
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 use italics
Well, it doesn't need quotation marks but it does have to be capitalized and it has to be in italics. If it's a name of the article in a magazine, then you have to underline it too. That's what I think.
underline the name of a magazine but quote the names of the articles.
The way I was taught in high school that helped me to remember when to use quotations and when to underline was: if you could hang the thing in question on a string with a clothespin, the quotes were the clothespin. If it was too heavy for that it needed to be put on a shelf(underlined). Examples: A magazine article "(Article Title)"A scholarly paper "(Paper title here)"A book (Book Title here)-------------------
No, you do not have to underline newspaper article titles when summarizing them. Instead, you can use quotation marks or simply capitalize the title for clarity.
Quotations for article titles. Italics and underlining are for full books - and the titles of journals.
Place the titles of articles in quotation marks, but italicize the title of magazines or books the articles appear in.You can do either that or put it in quotation marks, though the MLA standard is to underline the title.
No, you do not underline a DVD title. It is typically formatted in italics or bold to indicate it is a title.