no
No. A direct quote is words from another author (besides yourself) that are copied verbatim. This always needs quotes. Paraphrasing does not need quotes. Paraphrasing is when you restate the author's ideas in your own words. However, paraphrases sometimes incorporate direct quotes and these will need to be enclosed in quotation marks. The source should be acknowledged. A paraphrase is not a direct quote and does not require quotation marks. You do, however need to give credit to its author through correct citation.
Quotes come in handy when writing rhetorical essays. They provide evidence and support claims, usually in favor of your thesis. Paraphrase and summarize when you want to fit the source to your support your point, even when it supports the other side. Use paraphrases and summaries more when writing synthesis or argumentative essays.
the famous people dont say quotes
you dont write quotes you idiot. they are quotes because you say them.
" i dont have any quotes " -elizabeth scott That is her quote.
A quotation uses the original author's words, but a paraphrase uses the essay writer's words.
A paraphrase of a source involves restating its ideas or information in your own words, while still maintaining the original meaning and concept. It should not include direct quotes or copied sentences from the original source.
apply climotology data to the system model... next time dont paraphrase, jerk.
I will say avoid direct quote as much as possible; paraphrase the author instead. Good luck.
To properly cite a paraphrase in APA format, you need to include the author's last name and the publication year in parentheses after the paraphrased information.
I dont know, sorry!
No, you don't need your SSN to get quotes.