Parenthetical citation.
"Intext citation" refers to the practice of citing sources within the body of a text to give credit to the original author or researcher. This helps readers locate the full citation in the reference list at the end of the document and contributes to the credibility of the work by acknowledging the sources of information. The format of an intext citation typically includes the author's last name and the publication year of the source.
When citing a newspaper article in-text, include the author's last name and the publication date in parentheses at the end of the sentence where the information is used (Author, Year). If the author's name is not available, use the title of the article instead. Make sure the in-text citation matches the full citation in your reference list.
Turabian, or Chicago style, with footnotes or end notes. Specifically, titles should be in italics, and not underlined as in MLA style. Do not use MLA or intext citations.
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.
An interview is oral and a intext citation is written so you can't do a citation in an interview. You CAN quote someone in an interview and tell where it came from but that is the extent of what you can do.
The word "Ibid" (without quotation marks) means As above in footnotes when the newest citation matches the citation above it.
An Endnote is an identifier that links a citation to a source in MS Word
A synonym for "quote" starting with the letter C is "citation."
the police officer gave a citation
The root word for citation is "cite," which comes from the Latin word "citare," meaning to summon or call upon.
at the end of a book citation on a bibliography
Footnotes are one way. Inline citation is another. Bibliography is another. MLA (Modern Language Association) is a good source for how to do it.