A quoted passage is a passage which is someone's words. For example: I could copy and paste a news article clipping and use it as a quoted passage as long as you give credit to where it came from.
What? A passage is a Passage... passages don't have names...
They began the rite of passage. The rock valley ended at a narrow passage. He booked passage on a ship going to England.
A Passage to India was written by E.M. Forster.
De La Salle thought there was a northwest passage but there was not
A reading passage is an excerpt from a story, novel, or essay.
Proverbs 31 is the regularly quoted passage.
To add extra information ... E.G: I have curly hair ( which is blonde).
The Scripture passage quoted in the first sentence of the Prologue of the Catechism is from the Letter of St. Paul to the Ephesians (1:3): "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places."
A) Reintroduce the source whenever you use it, no matter how closely together the quotations lie. B) Cite the source of every quoted passage C) Cite the source of every quoted passage unless a single final citation will lead the reader to all the quoted material D) Use quotation marks around all passages copied verbatim from the source ((Answer) E) Certainly C and D, but A and B only if the reader would otherwise be confused about your use of another's ideas or the source of the ideas.
Who quoted what? and what are you expecting are answer to be!
A religious passage is a section of a religious text, such as the Bible, Quran, or Vedas, that is often quoted, studied, or used for guidance and inspiration by followers of that religion. It may contain teachings, stories, moral lessons, or instructions on how to live a spiritually fulfilling life according to that faith.
The Blythes Are Quoted was created in 2009.
"As Quoted."
is a quoted price afixed price
The Blythes Are Quoted has 524 pages.
The past tense of "quote" is "quoted." For example, "He quoted the famous line from the movie."
The word "sic" is used in a text to indicate that a quoted passage is being presented exactly as it appeared in the original source, including any errors or unusual phrasing. It is typically placed in brackets after the quoted text to clarify that any mistakes or peculiarities are not the author's own, but rather part of the original material. This helps maintain the integrity of the quotation while alerting readers to its authenticity.