MLA is:
After you gather information from outside resources to add to your own ideas about a topic, you will quote, paraphrase, or summarize those sources within the body of your paper.
Citing allows you to share with your readers where you got your information so that they can verify what you've written or follow up on an interesting idea, and it protects you from any charges of plagiarism.
There are two parts to a proper MLA citation:
Most English and humanities courses use the MLA style of citation.
There are two parts to a proper MLA citation:
1. The in-text citation within the body of your text, which provides the author's name and the page number/s on which the material you are citing is found. For example:
If you do not use a signal phrase to introduce the author then you would put the author’s last name in parentheses along with the page number. Use no punctuation between the name and the page number. For example:
2. The Works Cited list entry, which lists the complete information for the source and is provided at the end of your paper in your Works Cited list. Here's an example of an entry for a book:
Format:
Author's name (last name, first name). Book title (in italics). Publisher, date.
Example:
Lane, Frederick S. The Naked Employee: How Technology Is Compromising Workplace Privacy. AMACOM, 2003.
Here are some handouts (in both .docx and .pdf formats) featuring examples of citations for sources you might find through TCC's Library and the Web. This first handout is for the full works cited page.
Try these helpful sites that provide examples of citations for common sources, like books, e-books, and articles.
The following short video (3:35 mins) provides detailed instructions on citing in text in MLA style. One term you will hear in the video is "signal phrase." Here is a brief definition if you are unfamiliar with this term:
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