It is underlined under MLA rules or in italics under the APA rules, but never in qoutation marks. Quotation marks are used for quoting text from books, short story titles, articles in periodicals or reference works, etc.
Yes. A play is a major work, like a novel, so the title should be underlined, unless the play is a fairly short work, such as a one scene long tribute to another work. This would be too short to be considered a major play, so the title would be put in quotes. A play such as Shakespeare's Othello would be underlined or italicized, due to its length.
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
Book titles are italicized if possible. If not, they are underlined.
It should be capitalised as in Declaration of Independence
Titles of novels, plays, newspapers, albums, etc get underlined. Short stories, poems, song titles, articles, etc. go in quotes.
When quoting the title of a book, the title has to be underlined and the most important words capitalized. when quotina lecture, it depends on the length, if it is a long lecture, use the rules for books. if it is a short lecture, put between double quotation marks and capitalize the important words. (" ")
No
Yes, the names of short stories should go in quotation marks. The general rule is that lengthier, stand-alone works, such as novels and plays, should be underlined or italicized, while shorter works, such as short stories (what I'm assuming you're referring to) and most poems should be placed in quotation marks.
Typically, short stories are enclosed in quotation marks when mentioned in an essay, rather than being underlined. This helps to distinguish the title of the short story from the rest of the text and follows standard punctuation and formatting conventions.
sometimes
Series titles should be italicized. To punctuate the "Twilight" series correctly, you would italicize the title of each book within the series. For example: Twilight, New Moon, Eclipse, Breaking Dawn.
Put the title in quotes.