It depends on what sort of story you're writing. It maybe be helpful to but a dream sequence in italics, just as you might place a character's thoughts in italics. If you're able to convey clearly that what you are writing is a dream, italics are not needed, but again, italics may be a helpful choice for the reader if you go directly into the dream sequence.
Yes. The only time you put things in quotes is when they actually say somehting,
You just write out the dream -- most writers put dreams and thoughts in italics to show that they're not actually part of the action.
You write words in italics in stories if a word needs to be exaggerated(I mean the sound).
When writing by hand, use italics to indicate the title of a book or story. When typing, you can use italics or quotation marks. Grammatically, underlining is not commonly used in formal writing.
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.
A story is underlined or in italics. A short story is in quotes.
Yes, either quotation marks or italics are good.
When reading stories, you should understand a few things:What is the story about (the plot)?Who is the story about (the characters)?Where and when is the story taking place (the setting)?Why did the author write the story?Who is the author writing to (the audience)?How is the author writing (the tone)?What is the author trying to say to you as a reader?
In French, titles of stories are typically written in italics instead of being underlined. This convention is the same for other forms of writing as well, like plays, films, and books.
a good opening would bring your reader into a closer point of the story or writing.
Creative writing is not necessarily writing a story. It means just what it seems to. Fictional story writing is a part of creative writing though.
sometimes but usually the name would just be in italics
The duration of A Story about a Bad Dream is 3000.0 seconds.