Newsletter: (APA, 2001, p.242)
Example with Author:
Gebhardt, M (2003, January) Locating newspaper and magazine articles online. Inside the internet, 10 (1), 3-5)
Example with no Author:
Colds: Prevention is still the best medicine. (2000, December), Mayo Clinic Health Letter. 18, 1-3.
You can cite a source on the web by giving its URL.
NO
Yes, even when you paraphrase information from a source, you should still cite it to give credit to the original author and avoid plagiarism.
Yes, it is important to cite the source when summarizing information to give credit to the original author and avoid plagiarism. Even if you are putting the information in your own words, it is still necessary to acknowledge where the information came from.
you should never use this website as a source. along with wikipedia.com.
Yes, even if you completely reword information from a source, you still need to cite the original source to give credit to the original author and avoid plagiarism. Rewording does not exempt you from citing your source.
The Swiss investor Mark Faber publishes a newsletter under the title of "Gloom Boom & Doom Report". The newsletter is a popular source of commentary on the financial world.
Never
document
"cite" is to cite a source (telling where you found it). Look up "how to cite sources" in your google bar for more help with that. "sight" is how you actually see things with your own eyes.
Ask yourself, "Did this information or idea come from my own thoughts and knowledge, or did I learn it from an external source?" If the answer is the latter, then you should cite the source to give credit.
When writers cite a source of information, they are giving credit to the original author or creator of the information. This helps readers locate the source for further reading and allows for transparency and integrity in academic and research work.