No
No, when typing the title of a movie you should italicize it. Titles of films are treated the same way as the titles of books and plays (and other such works--see the link below for more examples). Some publications do use quotation marks around film titles--for example, The New Yorker magazine--but the standard rule is to use italics.
Perhaps it would be a good idea to buy a book that contains sentimental quotes to put in a letter to their sister. These quotes can also then be presumably used for other family members.
no i think im not sure but probably no
Yes, chapter titles are quoted in MLA format.
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.
Yes, you should put quotation marks around a sermon title when referencing it in written text. This helps to differentiate the title from the surrounding text and indicates that it is a specific, standalone piece of work. Additionally, it is a common formatting practice in writing to use quotation marks for titles of shorter works, such as articles, poems, and speeches.
no i think you underline it
Yes, you either italicize it or put quotes around the art title. Example: "Starry Night"
sometimes
Put the title in quotes.
Put quotes around the name of the poem. I'm not sure about long poems though, I'm looking into it currently.
Quotes....
QUOTES TITLE FACTS These are three main things you should have.
No.
possibly
No, You only put quotation marks around short stories, songs, poems, chapters, articles, other parts of magazines and other parts of books.
Sure. It is still necessary to distinguish the text as a title of a work. The quotation marks do that. The fact that the song title uses parentheses or that you have used the song title in a parenthetical expression does not matter. Use the quotes to identify it as a song title.