Italics are used for: the names of books &c., the names of ships, foreign words, and for emphasizing a word. There are some other uses but these are the main ones.
The title of the topic or article on the website is in italics. The website is not in italics. For example, say I went to the website Fix.com to find the article How to fix leaking oil. Fix.com is listed first, then year (or n.d.) for the article, then would come the title of the article How to fix leaking oil,then the retrieval and website information. This assumes no author is named in the article.
To reference a website with no author in Harvard style, include the title of the webpage in italics, the year of publication, the website name in italics, the URL, and the date you accessed the website.
To cite a website with no author in APA format, start with the title of the webpage in italics, followed by the publication or website name in italics, the URL, and the date you accessed the information.
To create an APA citation for a website with no author and no date, start with the title of the webpage in italics, followed by the website name in italics, the URL, and the date you accessed the webpage.
Answer this question… In quotation marks
To italicize website titles in APA format, you should use italics. For example, "Website Title."
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To create an APA citation for an online article with no author, start with the article title in sentence case, followed by the publication date in parentheses, the article title in italics, the website name in italics, and the URL. For example: ("Title of Article," Year Published). "Title of Article." Website Name. URL.
To cite an entire website on a works cited page in MLA format, include the author (if available), the title of the website in italics, the publication or copyright date, the URL, and the date you accessed the site. In APA format, include the author, date of publication, title of the website in italics, and the URL.
When citing a website with no author, use the website name or organization as the author in the citation. Include the website's title in italics, the URL, and the date accessed.
Titles of books, movies, TV shows, and other standalone works are typically written in italics.