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  2. Should Short Story Titles be italicized or put in quotes?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/165099

    Do camels dream? (London 1987). Edit. This works for short stories assuming the short story concerned is the only content of the publication. If one is referring to a story from a book of short stories, then quotation marks rather than italics would be used, and there is a further system for referencing this.

  3. Answer. Do not italicize short story titles. Here is our reasoning: The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association does not address short story titles in specific. However, section 6.22 of the Manual addresses the use of italics. They specifically say that the titles of books, periodicals, reports, webpages, and other stand ...

  4. Do you italicize fictional company names? [closed]

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/314982

    Improve this question. Generally in fiction writing, you don't italicize company names (even though you would italicize the name of a newspaper). But what do you do if the company name is fictional, especially a name that is not a real word (Like Schway). Italicizing it would make it clearer to the reader that it is a name (and not a typo).

  5. grammar - When do you underline a title? - English Language &...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/184415/when-do-you-underline-a-title

    Generally in MLA, titles of books (books being longer than novellas) are underlined, whereas short stories and plays are italicized. Formatting tautologically depends on style. This may be a general knowledge question as many resources are openly available to help.

  6. What is the proper convention for writing onomatopoeia?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/50412

    6. You might consider looking in the dictionary first: poof 1 |po͞of, po͝of| (also pouf ) exclam. 1 used to convey the suddenness with which someone or something disappears: once you've used it, poof—it's gone. 2 used to express contemptuous dismissal: “Oh, poof!” said Will. “You say that every year.”.

  7. how to write an onomatopoeia in a short story?

    english.stackexchange.com/.../356156/how-to-write-an-onomatopoeia-in-a-short-story

    1. It's a judgment call whether (for example) to italicize (or underline) swish (twice) in this sentence: "The wiper blades made a soft, cadenced swish, swish as the car purred along the wet, black highway and the rain pelted down"—but arguably both purred and pelted have an onomatopoeic aspect, too, and yet I wouldn't think that anyone would ...

  8. Should I use speech marks for sounds? [duplicate]

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/326314/should-i-use-speech-marks-for-sounds

    Italics, as Jim said. @sumelic If you can't use italics, bold or underline; I'd suggest using * or _ "around" the emphasized text... It's often used in plain text-files for emphasis. Strictly speaking; / = italics, * = bold and _ = underscored; but I think most prefer to use either * or _, and then as just "emphasized".

  9. When writing a paper, do I use italics for all titles? - FAQS

    rasmussen.libanswers.com/faq/32501?bcsi-ac-1890e3206a556864=2791AF9A00000002...

    Simply put: no. APA's Publication Manual (2020) indicates that, in the body of your paper, you should use italics for the titles of: "books, reports, webpages, and other stand-alone works" (p. 170) periodicals (journals, magazines, newspapers) Beyond APA's specific examples, know that certain types of titles are almost always written in italics.

  10. Do you italicize Museum names? - FindAnyAnswer.com

    findanyanswer.com/do-you-italicize-museum-names

    Odds and Ends: Titles of cartoons and comic strips (Peanuts, Calvin and Hobbes, Pearls Before Swine) are italicized. Exhibitions at small venues (such as a museum) are italicized (BODIES . . . The Exhibition) but fairs and other major exhibitions (the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition) are only capitalized.

  11. Use quotation marks or italics for written quotes?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/14876

    Do you have the money? he asked. But that was an idiosyncratic usage. Since this is an element of style, you are free to do whatever you wish, but remember that you may only wind up confusing your audience if you stray too far from what they perceive to be customary. Some authors use italics to denote what a character may be thinking: