It depends if you are using Microsoft Word on a Mac or PC. For a Mac you have to go to the toolbox, which there is a button for at the top of the screen. You then press the slanted I button. If you are on a PC, then you just press the slanted I button at the top of the screen.
No you can italisize it.
Yes, unless you are writing by hand in which case you can underline it.
No. Just give the website in the usual way.
Normally place the name of the book in italics, but not the chapter name.
I don't know why my teacher says this but of it fits under you arm you underline it and if it has to go in a suitcase or something like that you italisize it.
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.
It depends if you are using Microsoft Word on a Mac or PC. For a Mac you have to go to the toolbox, which there is a button for at the top of the screen. You then press the slanted I button. If you are on a PC, then you just press the slanted I button at the top of the screen.
Yes. A qualified yes. If the writing is standard print, then yes, the book title is underlined. However, the title may be italicized and not underlined. The basic rule is that names and titles that can contain smaller elements are underlined or italicized. Smaller elements such as song titles, poem titles, etc. at contained in quotation marks.
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.