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Monday, 25 May 2020

Do i underline a play or put it in quotations?

Tijuana Tatsak: Underline, or italicize:Books, book-length works, CD names, plays, movies, and things like thatExample:Romeo and Juliet______________^ ^That's supposed to be an underline...Quotations:Short stories, articles, poems, songs, and things like that.Example:"Rock Springs" by Richard Ford...Show more

Emeline Albracht: If you mention the title of a book, poem, or play, you put it in italics (if you're typing) or underline it if you write it by hand (since you can't really put handwriting into italics!)Quotations you need to use quotation marks, either double or single (" or '), it doesn't matter which you use as long as you use the same each time. If you have a double quotation, so if a novel says "Bob said, 'I don't really want to'." you still use the double or single as usual for the main quotation, and whichever one you're not using for the speech within the quote. If you are using a long quotation (ie. more than a line long) then you need to put it as a ! new paragraph, however for short quotes, it's fine to embed them into the sentence, eg. Bob is reluctant to be seen as agreeing with Joe's ideas, he says that he doesn't "really" want to go to the beach. With a play, a line or more of speech needs to be as a new paragraph, but in italics (if typed) or underlined (if handwritten). If you're just quoting a couple of words though you can embed them in the sentence. Hope this helps.x...Show more

Arnoldo Budzynski: Underline!unless it is a short skit that is part of something else.but if it's a play, underline or italicize

Troy Monsivais: We just had a essay in english about romeo and juliet. If its typed, you ilalisize it. If you hand write it, you out it in quotations.

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