EXERCISE 4. COPY THE FOLLOWING SENTENCES. ADD ALL NEEDED PUNCTUATION.

10. I must follow the people said Benjamin Disraeli am I not their leader

Punctuating Titles

In general, use quotation marks around the titles of short works—a short story, an

essay, a song, a magazine article, or the chapter of a book. Underline the titles of longer

works—a book, a film, a magazine, or a newspaper. (In printed material, underlined words

appear in italics.) Here are some examples:

“The Keeper of the Keys”

is the title of a chapter in Harry Potter and the

“Sweet Virginia”

is my mother’s favorite song from the Rolling Stones’

album Exile on Main Street.

I’ve seen the movie Chicago at least five times.

TV Guide is one of the most successful magazines ever published.

The Courier-Post serves southern New Jersey.

(Be careful to capitalize the exact name of the newspaper. Usually the

is not capitalized as part of the name, but in The New York Times it is.

Sometimes the name of the city is part of the name of the paper, as in the

Chicago Sun-Times, and sometimes it isn’t.)