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Acknowledging words, facts, or ideas from another source.
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It is important to give credit to the sources you use. When you copy words and ideas that are not yours and use them without giving credit, it is called plagiarism. People who plagiarize may receive a failing grade or even be expelled from school
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Used when summarizing, paraphrasing, or quoting.
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If you use the exact words of an author, you need to include them in “quotation marks.”
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Summarizing means taking ideas from a larger passage and condensing them into your own words.
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If you use the ideas or opinions from someone else and restate them in your own words, you still need to cite the source.
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No author? List the title and page number. The winds of a hurricane are most violent around the eye (“Hurricane Season” 7). No page number? List the title only. Hurricanes in the Indian Ocean are called cyclones (Nealy). No author or page number? List the title only. In Southeast Asia, they are called typhoons (“Big Wind”).
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If the information is well known If the information can be found in dictionaries Statistics and information that can be easily found in several sources and are not likely to vary from source to source
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A works cited page is a list of every source that you make reference to in your essay. It provides the information necessary for a reader to locate and retrieve any sources cited in your essay.
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This provides the information necessary for a reader to locate and retrieve any sources cited in your paper.
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Book by 1 author: McCaffery, Anne. Freedom’s Landing. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1995. Article with an author: Faulk, James B. “Western Frontier Life.” The World Book Encyclopedia. 1993 ed. Online Source: Oakley, John H. “The Achilles Painter.” The Perseus Project. Ed. Gregory Crane. Mar. 1997. Tufts U. 14 May 1998 WORKSCITEDSAMPLEWORKSCITEDSAMPLE
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“You must tell your readers not only what works you used but also exactly what you found and where you found it in the text” (Gibaldi 238). Gibaldi, Joseph. MLS Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 6 ed. New York: Modern Language Association, 2003. Always check to see if your citations match your works cited list
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Gibaldi said you must tell your readers not only what works you used but also exactly what you found and where you found it in the text (238). Gibaldi, Joseph. MLS Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 6 ed. New York: Modern Language Association, 2003.
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“Parenthetical Documentation Time” (Brian, Family Guy)
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