In chapter 4 of Jack's Great Adventure, Jack faces his first test when the king says, "Go to Eagle Mountain and bring me the silver cloak" (Ripley 24).
At the end of Jack's Great Adventure, Jack learns his most important lesson when the queen tells him, "A true hero is determined by what's in his heart" (Ripley 245).
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," Atticus Finch famously says, "You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view..."
Cather's quotation from her opening epigraph is echoed throughout Virgil.
No, you underline Novels and books
It's a character in George Orwell's novel. The title of the novel is 1984.
Yes, it is common practice to use quotation marks when mentioning the title of a novel in a sentence to indicate that it is a specific work of literature. Example: "To Kill a Mockingbird" is a classic novel by Harper Lee.
Following the model "Novel = underlined/italicized Short story = quotation marks," short films require quotation marks.
Death Sentence - novel - was created in 1975.
There is no novel that goes by such a name.
The nouns in the sentence are public, stories, and novel.
Now there's a novel idea!
I capered to the ending of the novel as I had no time to read the entire novel .
no
In American English, periods typically go inside closing quotation marks. This is known as the American style. However, in British English, periods go outside closing quotation marks unless they are part of the quoted material.