Formatting titles of
works in MLA format
A-State Online Writing Center
Knowing how to format titles of other works can be
confusing . . .
Here is a guide to help you know if you’re formatting those titles in your papers correctly!
1.Capitalization
DO capitalize the first word, the last word, and all other
“principal” (or vital) words within a title.
“Principal” words can be any parts of speech that hold significance to the title,
including verbs, nouns, adverbs, pronouns, subordinating conjunctions, and
adjectives.
Examples of subordinating conjunctions include: “after, although, as if, as soon as,
because, before, if , that, unless, until, when, where, while”
Examples of titles (and “principal” words in them):
Verbs: Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
Nouns: The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
Adverbs: Dearly, Nearly, Insincerely by Brian P. Cleary
Pronouns: She Said Yes by Misty Bernall
Subordinating Conjunctions: Darkness Before Dawn by Sharon M. Draper
Adjectives: Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? by Bill Martin Jr.
DO NOT capitalize these parts of speech when they fall
in the middle of a title:
Coordinating Conjunctions: “and, but, for, nor, or so, yet”
Example: The Princess and the Frog
Articles: “a, an, the”
Example: To Kill a Mockingbird
Prepositions: “against, as, between, in, of, to”
Example: The Wizard of Oz
The “to” of infinitive phrases: to do, to see, to have
Example: How to Draw: Drawing And Sketching Objects And Environments From Your Imagination by
Scott Robertson
ITALICS VS.
QUOTATION
MARKS WHEN
WRITING TITLES
Usually, you italicize large works and put quotation
marks around smaller works
Follow the graphic on the next page to know what to italicize and what to wrap in
quotation marks!
When to Use Italics When to Use “Quotation Marks”
The title of an entire novel or book:
The title of a magazine or newspaper
The title of a music album
The title of a film/movie
The title of a television show
The title of a website
The title of a chapter from a book
The title of an essay
The title of a short story
The title of a poem
The title of a play
The title of a specific article from a
magazine or newspaper
The title of a single episode from a TV
show
The name of an online article or web
post
Exceptions to these rules (titles that are neither quoted
nor italicized):
Scripture from religious texts
Titles of acts, political docs, other components of law
Titles of seminars, courses, workshops, etc.
Works consulted
https://www.grammarcheck.net/capitalization-in-titles-101/
https://www.wikihow.com/Capita lize-a-Book-Title
https://seconda ry.oslis.org/cite-source s/mla/how-to-capitalize-and-punctuate
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