Should I create an entry for an e-mail conversation?
How you cite e-mail messages depends on how you are using them in your work. If you refer generally to a series of e-mail exchanges… Read More
How you cite e-mail messages depends on how you are using them in your work. If you refer generally to a series of e-mail exchanges… Read More
If you paraphrase a single idea from more than one source and the sources are equally important, the order in which you list them is… Read More
Use the version of the name given in your source. For example, if the source gives the author’s name as Sarah, Duchess of York, then… Read More
One interview is one work, no matter how many people are being interviewed or how many people are conducting the interview, so you should create… Read More
To cite source code begin with the MLA format template . . . Read More
Cite unpublished director’s notes by following the MLA format template. List the director’s name in the “Author” slot and provide a description in place of a… Read More
List only the version you are using—in this case, the French edition. You do not need to indicate in your entry the language in which… Read More
If you need to quote from a bulleted or numbered list, you can reproduce the list in your essay, as in the example below: Parvini… Read More
Search results are not a work, so no works-cited-list entry is needed. If you are referring to the results as evidence, you can simply name… Read More
No. If the app is the work, as in the following examples, you do not need to indicate in your works-cited-list entry that you are citing… Read More