Difference between revisions of "In-text citations"
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Revision as of 16:43, 25 April 2017
Always provide the following if available (Rule 6.03, pp.170 - 171).:
- author(s) - if there is no author, use the title (you may abbreviate it, if it's long)
- year - if there is no year, use n.d.
- WHEN QUOTING (optional if you paraphrase), you must also provide a specific page number(s) or other locator (such as a section name, chapter/paragraph heading and/or number for online sources). If shortening a long heading, put it in quotation marks. The word page is abbreviated to p. and pages to pp.; the word chapter is written in full; paragraph is abbreviated to para (Rule 6.05 pp. 171-172).
Examples
- According to Marketline (2010), "direct_quotation" (p. 34).
- "Direct_quotation" (Acer, Inc., 2010, Environmental Scan).
- Brown and Clark (2012) reported that ...
- ....... (Brown & Clark, 2012)
- "Direct_quotation" (Jones, n.d., pp. 5-6).
List works by different authors who are cited within the same parentheses in alphabetical order by the first author's surname or group/organization name (Rule 6.16 p. 177).
Example
- .....(Bureau van Dijk, 2010; Datamonitor, 2009; Simpson, 2010).
Capitalize all major words in titles within the body of the paper (Rule 4.15, p.101).
Example
- According to the Nielsen Global Consumer Confidence Survey of 2010 [...]
- In the book Business Ethics as Rational Choice, Hooker claims that [...]