You didn't say which meaning you wanted to use. If you mean cited as in quoted a source for a report, you could say "I cited the magazine article."
If you mean cited as in to summon before a court, you might say "He was cited for drunk driving.
If you mean cited as in recognized for superior military service, you could say "The soldier was cited for bravery."
This sentence is a declarative sentence as it makes a statement.
A de novo sentence is a sentence imposed by a court without considering any prior sentence or recommendation. It is usually given when a previous sentence is determined to be invalid or improper, requiring a new sentence to be issued.
One would have to imagine an extreme set of circumstances. If the "jaywalker" resisted, or had been cited so many times, that he was taken to jail. And once in, broke a variety of rules that landed him more time. Then committed some crime, or was framed for some crime, while in jail, that got him a prison sentence. Then committed or was framed for a crime that was a life sentence offense. Or perhaps a massive paperwork snafu like in the movie "And Justice For All" where due to mistaken identity a person was sent to prison for someone else's crime when he was pulled over for a taillight being out. Otherwise, no.
Oh really! That is a declaratory sentence. A declaratory sentence does not need to be long.
From what I've heard so far, I would not want to live in a communist state.
She was cited for disorderly conduct for her indiscriminate deeds.
Yes, you should always punctuate a sentence that ends with a citation in a works cited. Use the appropriate punctuation mark (usually a period) to end the sentence before the citation.
Example sentence - Amanda was cited by the game warden for fishing without a license.
If you are cited numerous times for traffic violations, the State will revoke your license and you won't be able to drive legally.
In a research paper, it is not necessary to cite every sentence. However, any information, ideas, or quotes that are not common knowledge or original to you should be properly cited to give credit to the original source.
As cited in means as stated in the referenced source.
No, that would still be plagarism...you could put the sentence you want to use in quotation marks and then put which book you got it from or who stated it.
The definition of the word cited is quote as evidence for or justification of an argument or statement. Another definition for the word cited is mention as an example.
APA style uses references, not a works cited page, to acknowledge sources cited in a paper.
Officer Smith was cited for using excessive force. The firemen had to force the front door open. I didn't use much force, but I stripped the screw.
It's IRRECONCILABLE. Here are some sentences.They cited irreconcilable differences when they asked for a divorce.He always seems to be the irreconcilable in our group.Her way of thinking is irreconcilable with mine.
In Chicago style, footnotes are cited by placing a superscript number at the end of the sentence, followed by a corresponding number at the bottom of the page with the full citation details.