On a Works Cited page, which of the following should be in italics?

title of a book
title of a webpage
title of a short story
title of a newspaper article

I'm thinking book but I'm not sure:/

I can’t tell if y’all disliked cause you don’t like ms. sue or if she was actually wrong

The answer is A. title of a book

I took the test and its A
Hope i helped you out
have a great rest of your day:)

It may be correct idk tho, Ms. Sue has answered other previous questions.

which of the following is the idea presented from this line in To Be of Use? "I love people who harness themselves, an ox to a heavy cart,"

The idea presented from this line in "To Be of Use" is that the speaker admires people who work hard and use their strength to contribute to society.

which of the following is the idea presented from this line in To Be of Use? "I love people who harness themselves, an ox to a heavy cart,"

a. animals are more valuable than people
b. loving animals means taking the place of beasts of burden
c. people should relax while the animals do the hard work
d. hard work is associated with dignity and gratification

The idea presented from this line in "To Be of Use" is d. hard work is associated with dignity and gratification.

How does irony appear in the stories "The Gift of the Magi" and "The Necklace?"

Both "The Gift of the Magi" and "The Necklace" use irony to express a surprising or unexpected twist in the plot.

In "The Gift of the Magi," the main characters Della and Jim each sacrifice their most valuable possessions to buy the perfect Christmas gift for each other. However, the twist is that the gifts are useless because they no longer have the items they actually needed. This is ironic because they were unaware of the other's sacrifice and ended up sacrificing for the wrong thing.

Similarly, "The Necklace" is ironic because the main character Mathilde Loisel borrows an expensive necklace in order to appear wealthy at a party, but ends up losing the necklace and spending years paying off the debt to replace it. The twist is that the original necklace was a fake, and the one she worked so hard to replace was actually worthless. This is ironic because Mathilde's desire to appear wealthier than she was ultimately led to her downfall.

WHat is a comparison that is developed throughout the text and does not use the word like or as?