With a capital letter for the first letter of every IMPORTANT word. "And" or "Of" would not have capital letters - but don't be mistaken; "The" would. For example: The Hunger Games The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe
To be technically correct, "A Christmas Carol" is put in quotation marks (as I did).
you wouldn't
The correct punctuation is:Leaving on a Jet Plane, which was written years ago, is still a popular song.
If you are writing by hand, then yes you underline it, but if you are typing, you need to italicize it.
No, movie titles are underlined or italicised.. But if u typing u have to use
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.
You need to Underline it if you are typing it, if you are writing it, it needs to be in quotes.
== == == == The more common use is to italicize the title, but you can underline it if you wish. Italicizing is preferred and more common. According to Wikipedia's naming conventions, you underline or italicize the title of a film. However, this convention is not standard practice in major periodicals and newspapers, where it is correct to place double quotation marks around movie titles.
The title of a newspaper article should be enclosed in quotation marks.
For titles of films, use italics to show the title is a standalone work. If italics are not possible (such as in handwriting), underline the title instead.
A song title should be punctuated by using quotation marks around the title. For example, "Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen.