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  2. MLA In-Text Citations: The Basics - Purdue OWL®

    owl.purdue.edu/.../mla_in_text_citations_the_basics.html

    In MLA Style, referring to the works of others in your text is done using parenthetical citations. This method involves providing relevant source information in parentheses whenever a sentence uses a quotation or paraphrase.

  3. Paraphrasing in MLA - EasyBib

    www.easybib.com/guides/citation-guides/mla-format/paraphrasing-in-mla

    To paraphrase well, read the original a few times, consider the context, jot down the key ideas, compose your paraphrase, compare your paraphrase to the original, and add an in-text citation. The MLA advises using in-text citations in order to give proper credit to a paraphrase’s original source.

  4. An MLA in-text citation provides the author’s last name and a page number in parentheses. If a source has two authors, name both. If a source has more than two authors, name only the first author, followed by “ et al. ” If the part you’re citing spans multiple pages, include the full page range.

  5. Paraphrasing - Purdue OWL® - Purdue University

    owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/using_research/quoting_paraphrasing...

    6 Steps to Effective Paraphrasing. Reread the original passage until you understand its full meaning. Set the original aside, and write your paraphrase on a note card. Jot down a few words below your paraphrase to remind you later how you envision using this material.

  6. MLA In-Text Citations | Parenthetical & Narrative - EasyBib

    www.easybib.com/guides/citation-guides/mla-format/in-text-citations

    An in-text citation is a reference to a source that is found within the text of a paper (Handbook 227). This tells a reader that an idea, quote, or paraphrase originated from a source. MLA in-text citations usually include the last name of the author and the location of cited information.

  7. An in-text citation is required whenever the writer quotes, paraphrases, or summarizes from the source. ... Paraphrasing: According to the MLA, a paraphrase restates another’s idea in your own words. Paraphrasing allows you to keep your voice while summarizing and synthesizing information from one or more sources. Students should paraphrase ...

  8. LibGuides: MLA Citation Guide (9th Edition): In-Text Citation

    columbiacollege-ca.libguides.com/MLA9/in-text

    When you write information or ideas from a source in your own words, cite the source by adding an in-text citation at the end of the paraphrased portion, like this: This is a paraphrase (Smith 8). This is a paraphrase ("Trouble" 22).

  9. LibGuides: MLA Citation Guide: In-Text Citations

    butlercc.libguides.com/mla/intext

    Signal phrase (" Citation in prose " in the MLA Handbook): Introducing the name of the author or the work's title in the text of your sentence. Parenthetical citation: Paraphrasing an idea or using a quotation without the author/title in your sentence text.

  10. MLA in-text citations. MLA in-text citations are brief references that direct your reader to the full source entry. You include them every time you quote, block quote, paraphrase or summarize a source. The in-text citation must match the first word of the Works Cited entry—usually the author’s last name.

  11. MLA Citation Guide (MLA 9th Edition): In-Text Citation

    guides.library.unr.edu/mlacitation/intextcitation

    In-text citations in MLA style follow the general format of author's last name followed by a page number enclosed in parentheses. Here is an example: "Here's a direct quote" (Smith 8). If the author's name is not given, use the first word (or words) of the title.