Yes.To excerpt means to take out of a literary work in order to cite or copy.
no
An excerpt from Mark Twain's book Life on the Mississippi, was used on the students' benchmark test.
I would like to cite your excerpt in my manuscript.
An excerpt is a selected portion from a longer work such as a film or book. So long as you bear in mind its correct meaning, you can use the word "excerpt" in much the same way that you use the word "sample."The trailer shows an excerpt from the film "Avatar."The author read an excerpt from his new novel. I used an excerpt of the speech in my term paper.
The lecturer read out an excerpt from his recently published paper to his class to emphasize his point. Also excerpt is a short film or a piece of music from a text. I hope this helps :)
The teacher asked us to read an excerpt from the novel before class.
no
I'm afraid I don't have the excerpt you are referring to. Could you please provide more context or the specific sentence for me to assist you accurately?
Which sentence in the excerpt supports the claim that the American colonies could thrive independently from Britain?
As in " a draft of this medoc will make you feel better" draft means a drink of, this is an excerpt of "the cast of Amontillado" by Edgar Allen Poe
Taste
both a and b