yep, it sure is
No. It is either italicized according to the APA rules (American Psychological Association) or underlined according to MLA rules (Modern Language Association), but never both.
( ) are parenthesis. You never put a title between those. Sometimes you would use quotation marks " " . But usually a title is underlined. No it needs to be in quatation marks.
When you refer to the title of a book in a paper or article, you write the book title in italics.
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
No, you don't underline it.=) Sometimes though you can. I do. ____ If the report has been published (for example, by a government department) and made available to the general public, it should be treated like a book titled and italicized (or underlined).
No, it is underlined, just like a book title.
It can be anything you want it to be technically. I would include the title of the book in the title of the book. For example: The Glorious Cause By Jeff Shaara could be the title of a book report.
Underlined is a verb and an adjective. Verb (past tense of underline): The students underlined the title of the book in their reports. Adjective: an underlined word
The proper citation for a magazine is within quote marks. "Atlantic Monthly" All the words in the title are capitalized. The title of a book is underlined.
In quotes. Title of book is italicized or underlined.
Book titles are always underlined. On the computer though, you can italicize it.
Yes. A qualified yes. If the writing is standard print, then yes, the book title is underlined. However, the title may be italicized and not underlined. The basic rule is that names and titles that can contain smaller elements are underlined or italicized. Smaller elements such as song titles, poem titles, etc. at contained in quotation marks.