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Copy the following terms and their definitions:
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A note card is one idea, fact or anecdote that you gained from a source: *a “direct quote”(Use these mainly; you can paraphrase or summarize later.) -a paraphrase -a summary
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Paraphrase is restatement of a text or passage, using other words. To summarize is to sum up or to give a summary (of). A direct quote is when you take information from a source and put it in the exact words from the source itself. (Put quotation marks at the beginning and end of the quote.)
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KNOW WHAT IT IS! DO NOT DO IT!! Plagiarism: Plagiarism is the use of someone else’s work without giving that person the proper credit or no attribution at all.
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A source card or bibliography card gives/lists all of the information regarding your source, whether it be a book, article, web site or interview. A source card contains a citation.
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Citation - Information about a publication (book, journal article, video, etc.) that allows someone to identify and locate that publication. (The Works Cited is a list of source citations.) Works Cited page: The works cited page should be the last page of your paper, and is a list of your citations in alphabetical order, usually by the author’s last name.
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A parenthetical citation is an in-text citation. What is in the parenthesis should be the last name or first few words on the Works Cited. In other words, it should match your Works Cited.
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Nick says that Gatsby “sprang from his Platonic conception of himself” (Fitzgerald 92). Gatsby seems to be seeking “the basic premise of Platonism, that true reality is spiritual - that all matter is mere imitation, or representation, of true reality. Everything in the material, temporal world, is only an imitation or particular manifestation of a single Form, or Idea, that exists in an entirely spiritual realm. This Idea is perfect, absolute, unchanging; its imitation is imperfect, various, and changeable.” ( Liston 1) Gatsby’s idea of perfection is naive and misguided. Works Cited Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York: Scribner, 2004. Print. Liston, William T. "Not Just Personal: Platonism in 'The Great Gatsby.'.” The Midwest Quarterly 35.4 (1994): 378+. Academic OneFile. Web. 2 Jan. 2014. Pidgeon, John A. "The Great Gatsby.” Modern Age 49.2 (2007): 178+. Literature Resource Center. Web. 2 Jan. 2014.
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IDENTIFY THE FOLLOWING ELEMENTS FOR #1 the a. 2 b. c. Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby.. d. e. f. g. New York: Scribner, 2004. Print. h. Asia Price
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An opinion is a personal belief or judgment that is not founded on proof or certainty
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A fact is something that can proven to be true. A statistic is a numerical fact.
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