You would surround the quote with quotation marks in order to show that the words are someone else's.
You can use bold letters to emphasize important points, headings, or titles in a document. It helps draw the reader's attention to specific information and can make key details stand out. However, it's best to use bold sparingly so it remains effective.
To draw attention to what the American people do that the government doesn't
To draw attention to and reveal the subject's personality.
Spot lighting can be used to draw attention to art pieces.
You use quotations for short stories, poems, article, and songs I believe. Everything else is underlined.
You should not use quotations when you are paraphrasing information or providing your own analysis or commentary. Additionally, avoid using quotations for common knowledge or well-known facts that do not require attribution.
They're simply for emphasis. They're used to draw attention to a particular phrase or sentence.
You don't, you italicize them.
questions and answers.
no
Use quotations in your draft because they lend validity and immediacy to the writing.
to draw attention to what is being said for example in king lear, act I, scene II, line 11: "With base? with baseness? bastardy? base, base?" these commas and question marks draw the audiences attention to the matter of Edmund being of illegitimate birth.