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Titles of novels, plays, newspapers, albums, etc get underlined. Short stories, poems, song titles, articles, etc. go in quotes.
Reasonably short quotes, properly cited, should be defensible under fair use.
Reasonably short quotes, properly attributed, should be defensible under fair use.
Put the titles of short works, such as (most) poems, short stories and articles in quotes and 'stand alone' works in italics.
A story is underlined or in italics. A short story is in quotes.
quotes...... Quotes, direct speech, book chapters, the names of short stories, and thing like that. But don't put the punctuation in the quotes. Example: Incorrect - Who said "Blondes have more fun"? Correct - Who said "Blondes have more fun?" You would put the question mark inside the quotations, because it is part of the quote or sentence.
Reasonably short quotes, properly attributed, should be defensible under fair use.
Generally you can use short quotes with attribution without even asking for permission.
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Life is to short to drink bad wine
It protects the circuit from from further damage if a direct short or overload should occur.
It may well depend on what kind, how many, and how often you insert these "short quotes." The script and the show are, themselves, copyrighted vehicles, and you may not plagiarize the script for content.