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| Citation and Style Guides Citation Style Sheets (MLA, Chicago, APA, etc.)
When do you need to cite a source for information?
Citing a source means giving the author and page number either parenthetically or in an endnote/footnote. In addition, one must include the full reference somewhere in your work. This can occur in a bibliography or works cited, or in the first footnote or endnote that refers to that work. Please see below for when to use what kind of citation. Disciplinary Preferences Different citation formats are popular with different academic disciplines. Generally the forms preferred for the various disciplines are as follows:
Parenthetical Footnotes When a professor asks you to include "parenthetical footnotes" he means that instead of placing the footnotes at the bottom of the page you are to place them in parentheses within the body of the text where you would normally type the note number. It is usually a good idea to use parenthetical notes for works that you site a great deal in the course of your paper (i.e., if you were writing a paper on Madame Bovary you might want to cite that primary text parenthetically). Parenthetical notes can take any number of forms: (1) they can be traditional footnote citations (above) differing only in their placement (2) they can be abbreviated, sometimes offering only the author's last name and the page number of the cited passage, or (3) they can be abbreviated to the extent of offering page numbers alone (this should only be done with ONE source in a paper). It is generally a good idea to just ask your professor to specify which form of citation she prefers. citation Style Sheets (proper reference formatting) MLA
(Literature and Humanities) Elements of Style (Strunk
and White) ~ Back to previous page ~
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