Noah is not Selena Gomez
The titles of paintings and sculptures should be italicized or underlined to distinguish them from the surrounding text. Additionally, titles are typically capitalized, with significant words included, while articles and prepositions may be in lowercase unless they start the title. For example, "Starry Night" or "The Thinker." Always check specific style guides, as preferences can vary.
Click link below. You can click the museums and see the paintings.
Click link below for a long list of his paintings!
Thomas Kinkade hides an N in his paintings because he believes that it pays tribute to his loving wife, Nannette. Thomas Kinkade also hides a lot of other things in some of his paintings, such as his children's names.
Morris did not make a lot of paintings. What he did make was lots of designs for wallpaper and textiles. He also illustrated books printed in his "Kelmscott Press". These include his own poem "The Earthly Paradise" one illustration for which is "The Tree of Knowledge", a large fruit tree.
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.
Magazine names should be in italics or underlined. Magazine articles should be in quotations.
No, song titles are not underlined. Instead, they are put in quotation marks. Example: "Home on the Range" I don't know if this is true though
The names of books and other large works are underlined or italicized.
Generally, company names are not italicized or enclosed in quotation marks. Product names are often capitalized but can be italicized or enclosed in quotation marks when emphasizing them in a sentence.
quotation marks
In MLA format, original paintings require either underlining or italics. See example:Da Vinci, Leonardo. Mona Lisa. 1503-1506. Oil on wood. Louvre, Paris.
No. Ship names are like personal names or country names. For that reason, do not use "the" with a ship's name, unless in the phrase " the ship So-and-so." Titanic should be called Titanic, not the Titanic.
No you do not
Yes, you do.
Consult the style guide for the publication you're writing for (if it's for a class, ask your teacher what style guide you should be using). Putting article names in quotation marks is a pretty typical practice, though. Usually the article name would be in quotation marks, and the name of the publication it was in would be in italic ("slanted") type, or underlined if you're using a typewriter that doesn't do italics.
No, Italics.