Titles of stand-alone works (books, plays and movies) are italicized (or underlined). Also, titles of magazines and other periodicals (and newspapers) should be treated in the same way as titles of books - that is italicized or underlined.
Titles of works that normally appear in collections or in periodicals go in quotation marks (poems, short stories, academic articles, newspaper articles).
Underlining is sometimes used as an alternative to italics. Use either the one or the other consistently: do not use both. (If you are a student, follow the conventions in use at your school or college).
- Movie titles, TV shows, etc.
Movie titles are italicized, except for very short movies, which case are put in quotations.
Titles of TV Shows and Series are also italicized. Titles of episodes of TV shows, however, are put in quotation marks. For example, episode "Bad Blood" of The X-files.
- Songs and albums
Song titles should go in quotation marks and titles of albums should be italicized.
According to MLA formatting, book titles require either italics or underlining.
Titles of stand alone works (books, plays and movies) are italicized (or underlined). Also, titles of magazines and other periodicals (and newspapers) should be treated in the same way as titles of books - that is italicized or underlined.
Books, articles, poems, short stories, and episodes of TV shows typically use quotation marks for their titles. Magazine and newspaper articles also use quotation marks for their titles.
That will depend on the style manual being followed. It is used for narratives in some of them, others use italics or underlines.
That is determined by the style manual being followed. Some will use italics to show a title.
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.
Yes, titles of speeches are typically italicized when written in a formal or academic context to indicate that they are the titles of specific works.
Yes, generally speaking, quotation marks are used for titles of shorter works (e.g., articles, chapters, poems) in the sources listed on a reference page. For longer works (e.g., books, journals, websites), italics are typically used for the title. The specific formatting rules may vary depending on the citation style (e.g., APA, MLA, Chicago).
Yes, the titles of poems are put in quotation marks. The only exceptions are epics, which should be italicized or underlined. The general rule is simple: works that are generally published on their own ("stand-alone" works) are italicized or underlined, while works that normally appear as part of a collection (such as poems and short stories) are put in quotation marks.
Typically, it is only titles of works that need either underlining italics, or quotation marks. Titles of groups are just proper nouns, so they'll just need capital letters.
Information that must be placed inside quotation marks includes direct quotes from a speaker or text, titles of shorter works such as articles or poems, and certain words used as linguistic examples or when discussing the word itself.
Quotation marks are usually used for direct speech or when quoting someone in nonfiction stories. For titles of articles, essays, or short stories within nonfiction works, quotation marks are typically used. However, for the main title of a nonfiction book or a section within a nonfiction book, italics are commonly used instead of quotation marks.
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.
In MLA style, book titles should be italicized in the works-cited page. The title should be in italics if it is a standalone work (like a book) or enclosed in quotation marks if it is part of a larger work (like a chapter in an anthology).
Quotation marks are typically used around shorter works such as articles, poems, or short stories. Longer works like books, films, or TV series are usually italicized or underlined instead.
Quotation marks are usually used for components, like for example, they are used for chapter titles in a book, or individual episodes of a TV series, or songs from a Broadway show or a music album, or titles of articles or essays in print or online, or some shorter works kind of like short stories and poems.
Because short stories are shorter works than, say, novels, they require quotation marks according to MLA formatting.