no, you italicize it.
In a book report, you would italicize the title of a book, not underline it. When referencing a poem in your report, you would typically use quotation marks for its title. For example, "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost.
In academic writing, poems are typically put in quotation marks. If you are referencing the title of a longer poem or collection, you may italicize it instead. Ultimately, the formatting rules may vary depending on the style guide you are following.
No. If referencing it in a paper you will put it in quotes as you do a poem.
No, the title of a poem is enclosed by inverted commas (eg 'The Hollow Men' by TS Eliot) but the title of a book-length text - for example a novel or a volume of poems - is always italicised (eg The Skylight by Robert Gray).
If it is a long work, such as a novel or epic poem, yes. If it is a short work such a poem or episode no, you put it in quotations.
There are a number of ways to designate a title for a book, movie, TV show, poem, etc. They are to put the name between quote marks, to italicize or bold, or to underline the title. Whichever you use, be sure to capitalize the first letters of each word in a title. But if your teacher insists that there is only one proper way, do it that way.
no- you put quotes around the section of the poem that you used. then, in parenthesis, you put the author's name.
When typing the title of a poem in text, it is generally recommended to italicize it rather than underline it. This helps to distinguish the title from the rest of the text and adhere to formatting standards for written work.
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.
Treat the title of a speech in the same way as you would treat the title of a poem. Personally, I'd use single inverted commas for both, but there are alternative conventions.
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.
Title it any way you want unless the teacher gives you a specific way to write it.