Answer:
Explanation:
the titles of specific editions of sacred texts, such as the The New American Standard Bible. However, you should not write the names of holy books, such as the Bible, in italics. This rule applies whether you are including the title within your paper or on your works cited page or bibliography.
Examples of what to use in italics
Emphasis: When you want to emphasize a certain word or phrase in a sentence. (She was the only girl in the class who got 100% on the exam.)
Titles of Works: (Please note that we can also underline the following)
Books: (Elements of Style, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Jane Eyre)
Magazines: (Time magazine, Newsweek, Cosmpolitan)
Newspapers: (USA Today, Wall Street Journal, San Francisco Chronicle)
Plays: (Romeo & Juliet, Waiting for Godot, Uncle Vanya)
Movies: (Batman, Casablanca, Twilight)
Works of Art: (Monet's Waterlilies, Van Gogh's Starry Starry Night, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa)
TV/radio programs: (American Idol, BBC's Woman's Hour, The Simpsons)
CD/Album: (Michael Jackson's Thriller album, Parachutes by Cold Play)
Foreign Words/Technical Terms/Unfamiliar Words: When we are writing a text in one particular language (i.e. English) and want to introduce a foreign word or phrase, we tend to italicize the foreign words. (The word for cat in Spanish is gato.)
Names of Trains, Ships, Aircraft, and Spacecraft: (NASA's Challenger, QE2)