Of course it is, but don't over quote.
Yes, it is acceptable to use an author's exact words as long as they are put in quotation marks and the author is credited. This is considered proper citation and gives credit to the original source.
("Last Name" and "Last Name," Page Number) There are no quotation marks or commas in the citation.
The plural possessive noun of "author" is "authors'".
You become a writer, or author, when you begin to write.
Authors - General has written: 'Advocate for America'
Longfellow
The plural possessive form of authors is authors'.Example: The leading authors' organization is the American Society of Journalists and Authors.
Yes. An author's bias is the author's belief, or side of the story. An author's point of view is the direction in which the author is coming from or their side of the story.
Authors are the people who write books. EG: JK.Rowling is the Author of harry potter
A quotation from a respected source or author could lend support to your discussion.
The noun 'authors' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'author', a word for a personThe word 'authors' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to author.
You must place those words within quotation marks and state the name of the author and the book or work from which the quotation was taken.
et al. (and others).Use et al. after listing the first author only for subsequent multiple authors. Example (Smith, Jones, Taylor & Johnson, 2003); subsequent list would be (Smith et al., 2003).Notation for subsequent multiple authors in a citation is "et al." without the quotation marks.