Because underlining quotations is not standard practice, the choice would be stylistic. It would be best to be consistent with whatever method (underlining quotation marks or not) you choose though.
Underlining and italicizing are the same thing. Song titles should be quoted.
No. The term Stolen Generation is neither underlined nor placed in quotation marks.
Yes, a sentence with a quoted statement can have a comma outside the quotation marks if the comma is not part of the original quoted material. For example: She said, "I will be there tomorrow."
Names of races are just proper nouns (they require capital letters), and they don't require italics, underlining, or quotation marks. Generally, these requirements are for media not events.
Quotation marks are used to inform you of a quotation.
A directly quoted sentence begins with quotation marks (" ").
Yes, quotation marks are typically used in pairs - an opening quotation mark at the beginning of the quoted text and a closing quotation mark at the end. This helps to clearly indicate the start and end of the quoted material.
Names of authors - of songs, books, articles, stories and so on - should be written out in plain type. It is the titles of works that should be italicized (or, if italics are not available, underlined).
A story is underlined or in italics. A short story is in quotes.
Quotation marks typically go before or after commas, depending on whether the comma is part of the quoted material. If the comma is part of the quoted material, it goes inside the quotation marks. If the comma is not part of the quoted material, it goes outside the quotation marks.
Speech marks, also known as quotation marks, should be represented by double quotation marks (" "). For example, "Hello," she said. It is important to use opening and closing quotation marks to clearly indicate the beginning and end of a quoted statement within a sentence.
Scripture can be quoted in either italics or quotation marks, depending on the style guide being followed. It is important to be consistent within a document or publication.