Generally, yes. In the old days, the MLA stylebook recommended underlining the names of books and magazines. These days, italics seem to be the preferred method in academic papers. She was excited when her essay about The Beatles was published by Rolling Stone.
Yes. It is a name of a magazine then it should be capitalized.
When mentioning a magazine in an essay, italicize the name of the magazine to indicate it is a title. For example, "The article in National Geographic provided valuable insights on climate change."
Yes; the article title should be placed inside quotation marks, while the name of the newspaper or magazine is italicized.
name of a book
No it should not be italicized. If you are referring to a specific train then it should be capitalized. If the name of the train appears in a title of an article, book etc then it should be italicized in that case.
It should be italicized.
Yes, newspaper names should be capitalized. This is a standard rule in English writing for proper nouns like the titles of publications.
Well there is many scientific names but you have to make sure that it make sense
Not when you use its 'normal' name, like for instance flu, cancer or pneumonia. Only a disease's Latin name often is italicized.
When writing scientific names, use italics for the entire name if handwritten or underlined if typed. The genus name is capitalized, while the species name is in lowercase. The entire name should be in Latin and italicized/underlined to indicate it is in binomial nomenclature.
Unlike the species name, the genus name of an organism can stand its own. When it is written alone, it must start with a capital letter and must be underlined if handwritten or italicized if typed.ExamplesPlasmodium vivax (genus and species, must be underlined/italicized)Plasmodium (genus name only, must be underlined/italicized)P.vivax (genus shortened with species name, must be underline/italicized)vivax (should never be written, practically meaningless)
Yes, in APA style, the names of theories are italicized when mentioned in a paper (e.g., social learning theory). This helps to distinguish the theory name from the rest of the text.