No
Yes, Bible verses should be in quotation marks when referencing them in writing.
quotation marks
No, you do not italicize quotation marks when citing sources in academic writing.
Yes, quotation marks can be used to indicate sarcasm in writing.
Yes, quotation marks can be used to indicate sarcasm in writing.
No, quotation marks are not needed around individual letters when they are used as part of a word or sentence in standard writing. Quotation marks are typically used to indicate a direct quotation or to highlight a specific phrase in writing.
In academic writing using Chicago style, place quotation marks around direct quotes and titles of shorter works like articles or chapters. Use double quotation marks for the main quote and single quotation marks for quotes within the main quote.
In formal writing, such as academic papers or articles, it is not necessary to put quotation marks around street names. However, in more casual writing or in cases where you want to emphasize the name as a distinct entity, using quotation marks may be appropriate.
Use single quotation marks to indicate a quote within a quote.If you're using a quote that contains a quote you'll need to surround the embedded quote with single quotation marks.
Yes, when quoting a verse from the Bible, it is customary to use quotation marks to indicate that the text is being directly cited from the source.
In general, no. Quotation marks are used to indicate direct speech or a quotation from a text. Thoughts are usually presented without quotation marks in writing. If you are writing a story or narrative where you want to explicitly show a character's thoughts, you can use techniques like italics or inner monologue to convey this, rather than quotation marks.
No, you underline it. By the way, movie titles are in italics, and songs are in quotation marks.