It is usually desirable to make titles and quotations stand out from your own text. So saying The Sunday Times article The Price of Fish achieves this objective quite well. But it is not obligatory - it is a matter of choice.
No
No.
Theres really no difference if your doing a bibliography i suggest just skipping the website title and put S.A for same as article.
Yes; the article title should be placed inside quotation marks, while the name of the newspaper or magazine is italicized.
It depends on the formatting required by your teacher, but in MLA format you italicise the title's of books, but article or essay titles you put in quotation marks. But look up the formatting guides online and they'll tell you more.
Put the title in quotes.
I'm almost positive that you put it in quotes.
No
sometimes
No.
no you have to put it in quotation
Quotation Marks, it is short work, like a poem, not a book or long story.
no i think you underline it
You put the title of the article instead. :) Ex. She believed television was "a magic box of pictures" (ARTICLE TITLE HERE). lol
Theres really no difference if your doing a bibliography i suggest just skipping the website title and put S.A for same as article.
Yes, you either italicize it or put quotes around the art title. Example: "Starry Night"
QUOTES TITLE FACTS These are three main things you should have.