To provide an accurate MLA format for a parenthetical citation, I would need specific details about the article, such as the author's name or the title of the article. Generally, a parenthetical citation in MLA format includes the author's last name and the page number, if available. For an online article without page numbers, you can simply include the author's last name. For example: (Smith). If no author is available, you can use a shortened title of the article in quotation marks: ("Title of Article").
(Plante 87)
(Keyes 28)
(Henry 89)
"The" is the correct article.
That is the correct spelling of "ticket" (entry pass, or traffic citation).
(Reed)
To add a parenthetical citation in Word, you can use the "Insert Citation" feature in the References tab. Click on "Insert Citation" and choose the source you want to cite. Word will automatically format the citation in the correct style.
(My Life in Duluth 27) is the correct parenthetical in-text citation.
(Attack of the Robot Accountant 214) would be the correct parenthetical citation for citing multiple works by the same author.
The correct format for including a parenthetical citation for a book in an academic paper is to include the author's last name and the page number where the information is found in parentheses at the end of the sentence.
When a source has no author, the correct way to format a parenthetical citation is to use the title of the source in place of the author's name. The title should be italicized or enclosed in quotation marks, followed by the publication year.
("Values")
The correct format for an APA parenthetical citation when citing a source with three authors is to include all three authors' last names separated by commas, followed by the publication year in parentheses. For example: (Smith, Jones, Brown, 2020).
(Plante 87)
(Plante 87)
(Frimpong 25)
(McApplebutter, Attack of the Robot Accountant 214