To cite a primary source from a secondary source in Chicago style, include the original source in your bibliography and in-text citation, followed by "quoted in" and the secondary source information.
The way that you would source this depends on which style you are using including APA, MLA, and Chicago. On the first instance, include the entire name of the article and both authors in your paper.
If you are only using one paragraph or quote from a book, you would typically cite the entire book in the reference list, following the appropriate citation style guidelines. The full citation allows readers to locate the source and provides proper credit to the author.
To properly incorporate a Chicago style citation for a primary source within a secondary source, you should include the original source's information in the text and provide a full citation for the secondary source in the bibliography.
To block quote in Chicago style, indent the entire quote 0.5 inches from the left margin, do not use quotation marks, and double-space the block quote.
To cite the same source multiple times in Chicago style, use a shortened citation format after the first full citation. Include the author's last name, a shortened title, and the page number.
Yes, Chicago style generally requires the use of page numbers in citations for direct quotations and specific references to information from a source.
In Chicago style, a block quote should be indented 0.5 inches from the left margin, without quotation marks, and with the entire quote single-spaced.
To create a block quote in Chicago style formatting, indent the entire quote 0.5 inches from the left margin, do not use quotation marks, and maintain double spacing.
Italics are intended for sparingly use, only on a word or phrase. Therefore, you should not italicize a whole paragraph. The only time this may differ is if quoting a whole paragraph and if following certain style rules. You would highlight the entire paragraph, and click on the Italics button in MS Word.
<Ctrl>+<Spacebar> only resets the font characteristics within the paragraph. It does not change any paragraph characteristics you may have set by hand (such as via the Home tab ribbon), such as alignment, bullets/numbering, borders, or indents. To revert to the paragraph style characteristics, you have to click the paragraph style name again, and even then things might not be exactly right. For example, if you were in a numbered list, and you click the numbered list style again, the paragraph you are resetting may turn into a list of its own (and have its own number and space before or after it). To fix, highlight the entire list and click the style for that list. Although I cannot at the moment reproduce it, sometimes when I am trying to reset the paragraph style (per above), Word asks me if I want to save to a new Quick Style. Just say no!
Yes. Or you can make a different style and then apply that style to the paragraph but then you will have to have the insertion point in that paragraph.