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Published byGabriel Hodges Modified over 8 years ago
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The first word is capitalized. The last word is capitalized. The important words in between are capitalized.
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Some words in between are capitalized Important words Nouns Pronouns Verbs (even the small ones) Adjectives Adverbs Some words are not Small, unimportant words Prepositions (from, in, to…) Articles (a, an, the) Conjunctions (and, or, yet, for, but, so, nor)
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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
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Rewrite the title of your article using proper title case.
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This lecture will tell you how to indicate a title in your academic essays. Your essay’s title (the title you write) is already indicated: it is centered. There is no need to underline or put quotes around your title. This lecture is about the titles of other, outside works in your essay
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Examples The Cat in the Hat Gone with the Wind “The Tell-Tale Heart” “The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World” The Complete Persepolis
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When you write an essay, you must always give that essay a title. That title must be in title case. That title must be centered. However, because it is centered, you do NOT need quotes and you do NOT need italics. You do NOT need to underline. You do NOT need to bold.
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When you cite other people’s titles in your essay, you must indicate those titles with: italics (for major works) “quotation marks” (for minor works)
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Italics and Underlining mean the same thing Use one or the other: never both. If you’re typing, always use italics. If you’re writing by hand, always underline
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Think of a major work as anything you can pick up in your hand. Novels Comic books Magazines Newspapers Apply that idea to everything else: Album titles TV shows Movies Titles of web pages
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Some Major Works: Books Magazines Newspapers Pamphlets Long Poems Plays Films TV shows Radio shows Album titles Choreographic works (dance) Works of visual art (Painting) Electronic databases Web sites Electronic games
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EXCEPTIONS: Do not underline, italicize, or put quotation marks around the following titles: Religious Texts (The Bible, The Koran) Individual Books within Religious Texts (Genesis) Legal Documents (The Constitution) Computer Software (Microsoft Word)
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Minor works are in “quotes” Think of a minor work as anything inside of a major work. Short stories Poems Articles Essays Chapter titles Apply that idea to everything else: Individual song titles Episode titles of TV shows Article titles on web pages
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If the title uses punctuation, include it. If the sentence that contains the title of a minor work needs a period or comma AFTER the title, that period or comma goes INSIDE the quotes. Example: I really like the short story “A Rose for Emily.” She read the short story “A Rose for Emily,” and she enjoyed it. She read the short story “A Rose for Emily” and enjoyed it. I really like “A Rose for Emily,” a short story.
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Whatever punctuation the title uses, include it. If the title needs to be followed with a question mark, exclamation mark, colon, or semi-colon, those marks go OUTSIDE: Did you like the short story “A Rose for Emily”? I like the play “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf?” Did you like the play “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf?” that we all watched last night? Did you like the short story “A Rose for Emily”? The play “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf?” was good. Did you like it?
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