You use quotations for short stories, poems, article, and songs I believe. Everything else is underlined.
Either underline or put i n quotations. NOT BOTH
No.
You can either use italics or an underline.
Place the titles of articles in quotation marks, but italicize the title of magazines or books the articles appear in.You can do either that or put it in quotation marks, though the MLA standard is to underline the title.
No, you would italicize or underline the name of a painting. If you are using MLA format, then you should underline the name. The way I remember is that quotations go around short works like poems or plays, whereas sculptures and paintings take a long time to create. (Debatable, yes, but it's a helpful mnemonic.)
Quotations for article titles. Italics and underlining are for full books - and the titles of journals.
The way I was taught in high school that helped me to remember when to use quotations and when to underline was: if you could hang the thing in question on a string with a clothespin, the quotes were the clothespin. If it was too heavy for that it needed to be put on a shelf(underlined). Examples: A magazine article "(Article Title)"A scholarly paper "(Paper title here)"A book (Book Title here)-------------------
no use italics
In MLA style, article titles are typically placed in quotation marks, not underlined. In APA style, article titles are not underlined or italicized. It's best to consult the specific style guide you are using for formatting guidelines.
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The names of newspapers, magazines and other journals should be italicized. If italics are not available, underline if handwritten or use quotations marks.
No, you do not have to underline newspaper article titles when summarizing them. Instead, you can use quotation marks or simply capitalize the title for clarity.
Either underline or put i n quotations. NOT BOTH
No.
No, you would put in quotations. For example: "Love Story"
No.
No you don't, you can put the song title in quotations thought as a substitute.