yes you are supposed to but it depends on what its for. if its for a paper for school or a letter to the company, yes. but if its a note to pass in class, you don't have to :)
No, don't underline the title of a book you mention according to APA format.
You underline it if you are hand writing and italicize if you are typing.
If you are asking how to properly write the title of a book when you're doing an essay or report, you underline it. If you are asking how to invent a title for your writing, click on the link.
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.
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)-------------------
Yes, book titles are typically italicized or underlined to indicate emphasis. However, in modern writing and with the use of word processing software, it is more common to italicize book titles rather than underline them.
You only underline a title of a book if it is part of the essay and not the title of the essay. Understand?
You underline only the title of the work, not the author's name.
Yes.
The title of a book should be written with the first letter of all important words, as well as the first word, capitalized, and the entire title underlined. Underline a book title when written by hand and italicize when typed. Example: Lord of Light
No, you underline it.
It is not necessary. If you use the title of the book, underline the title.