book titles and major works,
e.g
...The book Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain was...
or
...My favorite song is 'Spinning around' by Jump5 in their CD The Best of Jump5, because...
To cite a website article with no author in MLA format, start with the article title in quotation marks, followed by the website name in italics, the publication date, the URL, and the date you accessed the article.
Italics should be used in MLA format for titles of longer works such as books, plays, films, and websites.
In MLA format, article titles should be enclosed in quotation marks.
In MLA format, article titles should be enclosed in quotation marks.
Perhaps, if you are handwriting the essay. If you are typing it, put it into italics.
Turabian, or Chicago style, with footnotes or end notes. Specifically, titles should be in italics, and not underlined as in MLA style. Do not use MLA or intext citations.
If you mean newspaper or magazine articles, and if you are using MLA format (i.e., for an English class), then article titles should be in quotation marks rather than underlined or italicized. APA or Chicago formats may have different requirements; I'm not familiar with them.
When citing an article in MLA format without page numbers, use the author's last name and a signal phrase or a shortened version of the article title in parentheses.
According to MLA format, movies require either underlining or italics.
To cite scholarly articles in MLA format, include the author's last name, first name. Title of the article in quotation marks. Title of the journal in italics, volume number, issue number, year of publication, page numbers. For online articles, include the URL and date accessed.
In MLA format, the novel "Don Quixote" should be italicized. In APA format, it should be italicized as well.
It all depends on what format in which you are writing. When I was still in school, I primarily had to use the MLA format. In MLA you are required to underline website names. This is the website that I always used to make sure my style was correct.... http://owl.english.purdue.edu/