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.
underline
No
sometimes
Put the title in quotes.
No, we do not put the title in quotations.
no i think you underline it
It is underlined under MLA rules or in italics under the APA rules, but never in qoutation marks. Quotation marks are used for quoting text from books, short story titles, articles in periodicals or reference works, etc.
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).
No. If referencing it in a paper you will put it in quotes as you do a poem.
Yes, you either italicize it or put quotes around the art title. Example: "Starry Night"
QUOTES TITLE FACTS These are three main things you should have.
no
Depends on what format you are using. MLA underlines titles. Chicago puts them in quotes. If this is for a class find out what format your teacher or school uses.