I would cite it as a print resource, with the company's name as a corporate author and the name of the product as the title. I would put (label) in parentheses after the product name. I would put the distribution information as the publishing information; that is, the parent company as though it were the publisher, and the address on the label as the publisher's address. If there is a copyright date for the label itself, I would include it, but most probably won't have that. I don't see why this wouldn't be an appropriate way to cite a food label, but if you are doing an assignment for a class, you might want to check with your instructor. Or, you could take the easier way and use the product's web site, simply citing it as you would any other website. I have not seen any instructions about citing the physical label, and I thing the Modern Language Association should step up and create a format for it.
To cite an illustration in a paper in MLA style, provide a caption for the illustration that includes the creator's name, title of the illustration, year of creation, and source of the illustration. Then, include an in-text citation with the creator's last name and page number (if applicable) within parentheses.
To cite a TED Talk in-text according to APA style, include the speaker's last name and the year of the talk in parentheses. For MLA style, include the speaker's last name and the timestamp of the information you are referencing.
Wikipedia typically uses the citation style known as "Cite web," which is a modified version of the APA format.
Let's get you straightened out first. You mean "citing," not "sitting." The verb "cite" means to refer to, and in particular to quote or paraphrase. Second, one doesn't cite MLA in a research paper; one uses MLA style to cite something else. Finally, if you want to understand MLA style, consult the book itself: MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. It's formatted in a way that makes finding what you need relatively easy. Relatively, that is. Yes, it's takes more time that flinging questions into cyberspace, but then what you get is often determined by the effort you give. Now go do the work.
kosac
The newest way to cite a website in MLA format includes listing the author's name (if available), the title of the webpage, the name of the website, the publication date or date last updated, the URL, and the date accessed. Make sure to follow the latest MLA guidelines for formatting and punctuation.
In MLA format, the correct way to cite a source title is to italicize it.
In MLA style, you would cite the quote as a direct quote with the author's last name and the page number (if available). For this quote, the citation would look like (Acton 276). You would then include Acton in your works cited list with the full publication information.
One popular site for generating MLA citations is EasyBib. Simply enter the information for the source you want to cite, and EasyBib will format it into the correct MLA citation for you.
MLA stands for Modern Language Association. Something written in MLA style is formatted with the guidelines that the MLA officials set. Basically, MLA style is a way to write formal papers and cite sources. If you need to cite sources MLA style or want to learn more about MLA, Purdue OWL is a very good resource: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/
To cite Carl von Clausewitz in APA style, include the author's last name and the year of publication in parentheses. For example: (Clausewitz, 1832). In MLA style, include the author's last name and the page number in parentheses. For example: (Clausewitz 75).
No, in MLA format, you do not have to cite after every sentence. Instead, you should cite your sources whenever you use information or ideas that are not your own, to give credit to the original source.