The name of any important work of literature is usually set in quotation marks to show the importance of the subject. The same rule applies to book titles, movie/film titles, song titles, literary titles and basically anything with a title that has been written by someone else.
Yes, as in:
"The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, / Moves on: nor all your Piety nor Wit / Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, / Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it"
with "/" marking the line breaks.
Quoting poetry in writing is different than quoting prose (non-poetic writing). You still keep what you took from it in quotation marks, and you also list the reference; if you are talking about a poem and then quote a few lines from it, as the reference you put in parentheses at the end of the sentence, you list the lines the quote is from e.g. (lines 36-38). Now, other than that, you separate the lines of the poem with a "/" (the forward slash), and you keep the original capitalization at the start of each line. You can still quote fragments just like prose. When you are quoting poetry, a long quote (or a block quote) is when you quote three or more lines from a poem, as opposed to the four lines for a long quote when you quote prose.
Yes, the name of a poem should typically be enclosed in quotation marks when it is mentioned in a sentence or written text.
An alternate to quote marks, is to render the title in Italics. This convention is much used in bibliography.
no
Put quotes around the name of the poem. I'm not sure about long poems though, I'm looking into it currently.
Yes. You would put quotation marks around the name of a game.Examples"Minecraft""Just Dance"
In the quotation marks.
Yes, if you are writing a paper about a poem, you should still put the author's name in quotation marks when referring to the poem. For example, "In 'The Road Not Taken' by Robert Frost, the speaker contemplates choices in life."
yes
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.
You do not put band names in quotation marks. However, you do capitalize the band/artist. Correct: Skillet Incorrect: "Skillet"
if its a really long poem then you underline it but most of the time you put quotation marks
No, "in Toto" should not be in quotation marks when used in a sentence. It is a Latin phrase meaning "as a whole" and is typically italicized in formal writing.
Quotation marks should not be used when blockquoting.
Company names are not underlined, nor are quotation marks put around them. They are written as normal proper nouns unless there are underlines or quotation marks in the name itself.
Musicals are either underlined or italicized. Individual songs from a musical would be surrounded by quotation marks.