Yes, either quotation marks or italics are good.
You can, but usually what someone thinks can be written in italics.
No. Just make sure the title is very clearly separated from the text.
No, when a character is thinking a specific thought, it is typically written in italics instead of within quotation marks. This helps to differentiate a character's thoughts from their spoken dialogue.
Titles of books, movies, TV shows, and other standalone works are typically written in italics.
The word "quotation" can function as a noun in a sentence. It refers to the act of repeating or mentioning something said or written by someone else.
Quotation marks should be used when referring to a short story, such as "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner. Italics, or underlining, should be used for whole books, such as To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee.
The word "out" is written in italics to emphasize it and draw attention to it within a sentence or text. Italics are often used to denote emphasis, titles of works, or foreign words.
italics
Song titles go in quotation marks. Example: "Amazing Grace" CD albums are italicized on the computer or underlined if written by hand. Exampe: Daughtry
Yes, when you write about a word you should make it clear that you are talking about the word by placing it between quotation marks or writing it in italics. It should be written like this- "reread", if it is a from a play or a quote of a quote it should be written like this- "'reread'"
small, lost, big, little, founded, hurry,
If you are writing something else and referring to an essay you have written, you would put the title of that essay in quotation marks, but the title at the top of your essay (like the title of any document) should not have quotation marks.