yes they do
Quotation Marks, it is short work, like a poem, not a book or long story.
You use italics. However, do not italicize the word the, even when it is part of the title (the New York Times), and do not italicize the name of the city in which the newspaper is published unless that name is part of the title: the Hartford Courant, but the London Times.
Titles of stand-alone works (books, plays and movies) are italicized (or underlined). Also, titles of magazines and other periodicals (and newspapers) should be treated in the same way as titles of books - that is italicized or underlined.Titles of works that normally appear in collections or in periodicals go in quotation marks (poems, short stories, academic articles, newspaper articles).Underlining is sometimes used as an alternative to italics. Use either the one or the other consistently: do not use both. (If you are a student, follow the conventions in use at your school or college).- Movie titles, TV shows, etc.Movie titles are italicized, except for very short movies, which case are put in quotations.Titles of TV shows and series are also italicized. Titles of episodes of TV shows, however, are put in quotation marks. For example, episode "Bad Blood" of The X-files.- Songs and albumsSong titles should go in quotation marks and titles of albums should be italicized.According to MLA formatting, book titles require either italics or underlining.
Only short films go in quotation marks. Full-length films are italicized. Similarly, short story titles are put in quotation marks, while titles of full-length books are italicized.Also, titles of TV shows are italicized, while episodes are put in quotation marks (for example, episode, "Humbug," of The X-files).
Information that must be placed inside quotation marks includes direct quotes from a speaker or text, titles of shorter works such as articles or poems, and certain words used as linguistic examples or when discussing the word itself.
Titles of poems should be put in inverted commas (quotation marks).
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.
To write a magazine title in your paper, you should italicize the title. For example, if the magazine's title is "National Geographic," you would write it as National Geographic in your paper to indicate that it is a title.
you punctuate the name of a magazine by making it like this "BMX daily" if the name of the magazine is BMX daily Italics * Use for titles of works of art such as plays, books, newspapers, magazines, motion pictures, paintings and statues (Titles of shorter works and of parts of larger works, such as songs, arias, chapters are enclosed in quotation marks or simply initial-capitalized.) Example: * Gallaudet Today is an informative magazine.
Song titles go in quotation marks. Example: "Amazing Grace" CD albums are italicized on the computer or underlined if written by hand. Exampe: Daughtry
Yes, in American English, commas always go inside quotation marks, regardless of how many titles are in the sentence. For example: "I listened to 'Shape of You,' 'Despacito,' and 'Havana' on the radio yesterday."
In American English, commas always go inside the quotation marks when separating multiple poem titles. For example: "The Road Not Taken," "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," and "O Captain! My Captain!"