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Get a Little Help from Quotes
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Why Incorporate Quotes?
Using quotes will support your opinion or your thesis. Quotes can provide “proof” of what you are writing. Quotes show that you know and understand the material.
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How to Incorporate Quotes
Make sure you properly PUNCTUATE and CITE. Do not just throw a quote in randomly. Talk a bit about your point, add a relevant quote, then talk about that quote. Avoid quotes about plot detail. Choose quotes that can be analyzed and “dug into.”
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What comes next? Practice, of course!
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Quotations practice Main trait: loyalty
Specific example: “I took off my clothes, picked up my ax, and stepped down into the icy water” (Rawls 107). How to introduce, incorporate, and analyze it: Billy shows on many occasions that he is there for his dogs, especially when there is danger. At one point when Old Dan falls into a cold, icy hole, Billy does not hesitate to save him: “I took off my clothes, picked up my ax, and stepped down into the icy water” (Rawls 107). He winds up saving Old Dan from certain death. He even risks his own life for his dog, but Billy does not even think about his own safety.
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Quotations practice Main trait: impulsive
Specific example: "'I'm going to let him call your bet, but now you listen. If you boys take him up there to hunt a ghost coon, and jump on him, and beat him up, you're sure going to hear it from me'" (127). How to introduce, incorporate and analyze it: Grandpa is a very proud man when it come to Billy, but that pride gets the most of him when the Pritchard boys come to his store. When the boys challenge Billy, it is Grandpa who says, "'I'm going to let him call your bet, but now you listen. If you boys take him up there to hunt a ghost coon, and jump on him, and beat him up, you're sure going to hear it from me'" (127). Unfortunately, this bets causes…
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