Purdue Owl has great articles on citing your sources: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/
Also, check out these great automatic citation websites:
http://searchcited.com - Completely free. Cite internet sources as you see them in Google. I recommend this for internet sources.
http://easybib.com - MLA is free, cite urls, books, and more automatically, but you have to type in each one individually. I recommend this for book sources.
Each format, MLA/APA/Chicago, is completely different, and you need to know which one you should use. Check out Purdue Owl for that if you don't know.
If applicable, check with your instructor on how he or she would like sources formatted.
To cite internet sources, use the author's name, publication date, title of the webpage, URL, and date accessed. For example, a citation for an article on a website would look like this: Smith, J. (2021). "How to Cite Internet Sources." Retrieved from www.example.com. Accessed on May 5, 2021.
No, it is not plagiarism if you properly cite your sources.
No, it is not considered plagiarism if you properly cite your sources.
When you cite your sources in academic writing, it is called referencing or citing your sources.
To ensure proper attribution of sources in a research paper, cite the author's name, publication date, title of the work, and the source where the information was found (such as a book, website, or journal).
The text citation for the website "How to Cite Sources in APA Style" with no author is ("How to Cite Sources in APA Style," n.d.).
internet, book, encyclopedia, interviews, etc
easybib.com does MLA for free, and other formats for a monthly fee.
Yes, you can cite your book in your research paper.
A bibliography is a listing of books on a certain subject. It is often used at the end of a fact book or thesis and it serves to cite sources.
internet and book
"The teacher told the students to cite their sources for their report."