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Titles in quotation marks that include (or in unusual cases consist of) something that requires italicization for some other reason than being a title, e.g. a genus and species name, or a non-English phrase, or the name of a larger work being referred to, also use the needed italicization, inside the quotation marks: "Ferromagnetic Material in ...
This template (short for "format title: quotes then italic") is intended for formatting article titles of television episodes or album tracks on disambiguation pages.It puts the non-parenthetical portion of a page title in double quotes, puts the parenthetical portion in italics, and links to the given page.
I believe song titles usually go in quotes instead of italics because songs are fairly short. Similarly, an article title would go in quotes and a book title would usually be in italics. Maurreen 16:01, 29 Oct 2004 (UTC) This is an unconvincing distinction (though I know it's one that's been made by many style referees over the years).
Often the series title will be obvious and derived from the title of one of the books/films (e.g., Twilight based on the Twilight novel, The Hunger Games based on The Hunger Games novel, Star Trek based on the original Star Trek TV series, Star Wars based on the Star Wars film and various other films in the series) or from a common part of the ...
Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Television (MOS:TV) Covers television series, seasons and episodes. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Titles (MOS:TITLE) About the use of italics or quotation marks for titles of works. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Video games (MOS:VG) Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Visual arts (MOS:VA) Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Writing about fiction ...
Exclamation points (!) should usually only be used in direct quotes and titles of creative works. Bold type is reserved for certain uses. Quotation marks for emphasis of a single word or phrase are incorrect, and "scare quotes" are discouraged. Quotation marks are to show that you are using the correct word as quoted from the original source.
TV SHOW TITLE SURNAMES: LASSO, MARS, ROGERS, SMART. Connections #99 was a good one to start off the new work week. At first, I tried including SMART with three of the other "intelligent" words to ...
The short version is, use either, which ever makes most sense in the article (e.g. use quotes for an article with a lot of italics, e.g. loads of foreign phrases or album titles, use italics for an article with lots of quoted material), just be consistent in the article. — SMcCandlish ‹(-¿-)› 05:39, 4 September 2008 (UTC)