Yes.
No, citations should be placed at the end of a sentence or after a direct quote. This helps maintain the flow of your writing and ensures that your sources are properly credited. By placing citations at the end, you also make it easier for readers to follow your sources.
Yes, if the question is a complete sentence and the citation follows the question within the same sentence, you would typically place a period after the closing parenthesis of the citation to end the sentence.
Simple. I live in Middle America.
Yes, in APA style, the period for a sentence comes before the internal citation. This means that your sentence should end with a period, followed by the internal citation. For example: "This is a sample sentence." (Author, Year).
you would put it after
the police officer gave a citation
when you put the word 'cholera' in the beginning of the sentence, like: Cholera is a disease.
The Shiek's encampment was inthe middle of an oasis.
It's best practice to cite the source each time you use information from it within the text of your paper, not just in footnotes. This ensures proper attribution and clarity for readers. However, you can streamline the citations by using shortened citations after the first full citation.
If you have a quote in the middle of the sentence then don't put a period there, put a comma, an exclamation mark, or a question mark. If it is at the end of a sentence then put a period inside the quotation marks.
When you mail letters, write the recipient in the middle of the envelope.
You can tell that a sentence is part of the author's response by looking at the citation.
Any end punctuation will work depending on the sentence.