It should be enclosed in quotation marks.
Company names are not underlined, nor are quotation marks put around them. They are written as normal proper nouns unless there are underlines or quotation marks in the name itself.
Titles of articles are placed in quotes, because they appear in a longer publication, and the title of the journal in which they appear is italicized or underlined. Titles of books usually underlined or italicized.
Yes, the names of short stories should go in quotation marks. The general rule is that lengthier, stand-alone works, such as novels and plays, should be underlined or italicized, while shorter works, such as short stories (what I'm assuming you're referring to) and most poems should be placed in quotation marks.
If you mean newspaper or magazine articles, and if you are using MLA format (i.e., for an English class), then article titles should be in quotation marks rather than underlined or italicized. APA or Chicago formats may have different requirements; I'm not familiar with them.
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.
A book title should be underlined or italicized - not placed in quotation marks.
Because underlining quotations is not standard practice, the choice would be stylistic. It would be best to be consistent with whatever method (underlining quotation marks or not) you choose though.
It should be centered, but NOT underlined or in quotation marks. If there is a book title in the title it should be in quotation marks with the authors last name and year published in parentheses. Did you find this helpful? Recommend 12blackroses if yes!
The name, capitalized of course, can be enclosed in double quotation marks, underlined, or italicized, your choice.
The title of a story should be in italics or underlined if writing it by hand. If typing, it should be in italics or enclosed in quotation marks.
In APA Style, the title of an article should be in sentence case and enclosed in double quotation marks, not underlined or italicized.
Yes. Only books should be underlined.
Following the model "Novel = underlined/italicized Short story = quotation marks," short films require quotation marks.
The proper usage will be based on the specific citation manual being followed. It will specify the format for the references.
No. Movie titles should be underlined or italicized.
Magazines are typically italicized rather than underlined or placed in quotation marks. For example, "National Geographic" or Time.
In a bibliography, only titles of shorter works such as articles, poems, and short stories should be enclosed in quotation marks. Titles of books, journals, websites, and movies should be italicized.