it would be an idealized account that strays from fact at time
Yes, chapter titles are quoted in MLA format.
single quotation marks
yes so you know what they mean
A quotation at the head of a poem (or novel, or chapter of one) is called an epigraph.The quotation from Dante that opens TS Eliot's "Lovesong of J Alfred Prufrock" is an example of an epigraph.
The quote at the beginning of a chapter is typically called an "epigraph." It is a quotation or excerpt that sets the tone or theme for the content that follows in the chapter.
Read chapter 11 and you will find the answers.
Yes, you should put quotation marks around the title of a speech, just like you would for the title of an article or a chapter in a book.
An epigraph. It is a brief quotation or saying that appears at the beginning of a book, chapter, or section, to set the tone or theme of the work that follows.
The Spanish word 'capitulo' translates as 'chapter' in English. It might be used when describing which chapter one is in reading in a book or starting a new chapter in one's life.
You read it. Or if your wondering how to do the strategy's than you can ask your self questions.
The correct quotation is, "Jesus wept." It is found in the Gospel of St. John, chapter 11, verse 35.
== == * An epigraph is a quotation placed at the beginning of a work or a chapter. * An epigraph should be formatted like a block quotation. * Never place an epigraph in quotation marks. * Place an epigraph in italics. * Place a foot note number after the epigraph.