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It would look nicer to italicize The Federalist Papers, but it is also acceptable to underline the title of books.
No, you would underline or italicize a painting, or a work of art. (you would underline it if you were writing but if you were typing, you should italicize it.)According to MLA formatting, paintings and major works are either underlined or italicized. Smaller works -- such as photographs -- require only quotation marks.but the correct answer for this question is put theses things in a quotation mark setting.
You would underline or italicize the name of the book on tape rather than use quotation marks.
Generally, works that can stand alone (novels, plays, movie titles) are italicized or underlined. The APA Publication Manual states that you would need to underline, but it is commonly accepted that you may italicize when typing and including such a title. Shorter pieces (TV show episodes, poems, etc) are where one would use quotation marks.
You wouldn't italicize the entire phrase, no..You would italicize "New York Times" but not Bestseller.For example: "...in the New York Times Bestseller by..."
You use italics. However, do not italicize the word the, even when it is part of the title (the New York Times), and do not italicize the name of the city in which the newspaper is published unless that name is part of the title: the Hartford Courant, but the London Times.
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.
Yes, it is common to italicize the titles of courses when writing them in a formal document or paper. This helps to make the course titles stand out and conform to formatting conventions.
Either underline or italicize.
The event was a colossal failure
Here's a rule to use in school: When it's LONG it gets a LINE When it's QUICK it gets a QUOTE. Italics are often substituted for lines - check w/your teacher. So, Title of books - line; chapters in books, quotes. CD or Album - line; individual songs, quotes. TV shows - lines; episodes, quotes.
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.