It means what it says. No more than 10% of your paper may be quotations from other sources.
There is none. The word research can be a verb or a noun, and as a noun can be an adjunct with other nouns, as in research facility, research paper, or research grant.An adjective that is related to research is researchable.
do it yourself
Perhaps it is because it looks paper thin. No research done, it just seems logical.
Show how a footnote is shown for a definition the the text of a research paper?
It's called a bibliography.
A quotation from a respected source or author could lend support to your discussion.
Yes, you should put journal articles in quotation marks when citing them in your research paper.
Yes, you should put a journal article title in quotation marks when citing it in your research paper.
Plagiarism.
The reason you include the source of who said a quotation when you use it in your research paper is because the quote is not your original words. You need to credit the author, which is done by giving a citation to the source where you found the quoted material.
To properly format a quotation in a research paper using Chicago style block quotes, you should indent the entire quotation by 0.5 inches, use double spacing, and not include quotation marks. Additionally, the citation should be placed at the end of the quote in parentheses with the author's last name, publication year, and page number.
To cite a website with no author in a research paper, use the title of the webpage in quotation marks followed by the publication date, if available, and the URL. For example: ("Title of Webpage," n.d., URL).
To cite an ad in a research paper, follow the format for citing a print advertisement: include the ad's title in quotation marks, the publication or website where it appeared, the date it was published, and the URL if it was online.
To cite a newspaper article with no author in a research paper, use the title of the article in quotation marks followed by the name of the newspaper in italics, the publication date, and the URL if it was accessed online.
To cite an article from a website in a research paper, include the author's name, the article title in quotation marks, the website name in italics, the publication date, the URL, and the date you accessed the article.
To cite a web article with no author in a research paper, use the title of the article in quotation marks followed by the publication date and the URL. For example: ("Title of Article," publication date, URL).
Anything that is exactly the same wording as your source. Usually if the phrase is more than 3 words. Also, the quote is only in quotation marks if it is less than 4 lines. Paraphrasing requires citation, but not quotation marks.