well it depends if your talking about when some one says something if so you put it around the words the person said..... example: "Ashley, will you go to the homecoming dance with me?!", said Nick. "Of coarse I will Nick!", Ashley said happily.
No, we do not put the title in quotations.
yes. th person who is quoting could be quoting someone who is quoting someone else and so on.
Quotation marks are not used when you are talking to yourself. The only exception is that you are quoting yourself as a reference.
Yes, when writing sounds, such as onomatopoeias, you can put them in quotations to indicate they are meant to represent actual noises. For example, "meow" or "beep." This helps readers understand that the word is describing a sound.
Yes, when writing the title of a movie in a paper, you should italicize it instead of using quotations marks. This follows the standard formatting guidelines for titles of major works in writing.
No you don't, you can put the song title in quotations thought as a substitute.
No, but you do put quotation marks around it and write who your quoting from.
yes if it is from someone elses work
If you're quoting an article, you would, but if you're typing something and it's an article, you underline. Same goes for writing.
Yes, you would put "Mayflower" in quotations because it is an actual name of a boat.
No.
no not usually