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Use the menu below to learn more about quoting and paraphrasing.
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How to Quote a Source
| Introducing
a quotation
One of your jobs as a writer is to guide your reader through your
text. Don't simply drop quotations into your paper and leave it
to the reader to make connections.
Integrating a quotation into your text usually involves two elements:
Often both the signal and the assertion appear in a single introductory
statement, as in the example below. Notice how a transitional phrase
also serves to connect the quotation smoothly to the introductory
statement.
Ross (1993), in her study of poor and working-class mothers in
London from 1870-1918 [signal], makes it clear
that economic status to a large extent determined the meaning
of motherhood [assertion]. Among this population
[connection], "To mother was to work for
and organize household subsistence" (p. 9).
The signal can also come after the assertion, again with a connecting
word or phrase:
Illness was rarely a routine matter in the nineteenth century
[assertion]. As [connection] Ross observes [signal],
"Maternal thinking about children's health revolved around
the possibility of a child's maiming or death" (p. 166).
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Formatting Quotations
| Short
direct prose |
Incorporate short direct
prose quotations into the text of your paper and enclose them in
double quotation marks:
According to Jonathan Clarke, "Professional diplomats often
say that trying to think diplomatically about foreign policy is
a waste of time." 1 |
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| Longer prose quotations |
Begin longer quotations (for instance,
in the APA system, 40 words or more) on a new line and indent the
entire quotation (i.e., put in block form), with no quotation marks
at beginning or end, as in the quoted passage from our Successful
vs. Unsucessful Paraphrases page.
Rules about the minimum length of block quotations, how many spaces
to indent, and whether to single- or double-space extended quotations
vary with different documentation systems; check the guidelines
for the system you're using.
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| Quotation
of Up to 3 Lines of Poetry |
Quotations of up to
3 lines of poetry should be integrated into your sentence. For
example:
In Julius Caesar, Antony begins his famous speech
with "Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears; / I
come to bury Caesar, not to praise him" (III.ii.75-76).
Notice that a slash (/) with a space on either side is used to
separate lines.
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| Quotation of More
than 3 Lines of Poetry |
More than 3 lines of
poetry should be indented. As with any extended (indented) quotation,
do not use quotation marks unless you need to indicate a quotation
within your quotation. |
Punctuating
with Quotation Marks
| Parenthetical citations
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With short quotations,
place citations outside of closing quotation marks, followed by
sentence punctuation (period, question mark, comma, semi-colon,
colon):
Menand (2002) characterizes language as "a social
weapon" (p. 115).
With block quotations, check the guidelines for the documentation
system you are using.
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| Commas and periods |
Place inside closing quotation marks when no parenthetical
citation follows:
Hertzberg (2002) notes that "treating the Constitution
as imperfect is not new," but because of Dahl's credentials,
his "apostasy merits attention" (p. 85).
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| Semicolons and colons |
Place outside of closing quotation
marks (or after a parenthetical citation).
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| Question
marks and exclamation points |
Place inside closing quotation
marks if the quotation is a question/exclamation:
Menand (2001) acknowledges that H. W. Fowler's Modern
English Usage is "a classic of the language," but
he asks, "Is it a dead classic?" (p. 114).
[Note that a period still follows the closing parenthesis.]
Place outside of closing quotation marks if the entire sentence
containing the quotation is a question or exclamation:
How many students actually read the guide to find out what
is meant by "academic misconduct"?
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| Quotation within
a quotation |
Use single quotation marks
for the embedded quotation:
According to Hertzberg (2002), Dahl gives the U. S. Constitution
"bad marks in 'democratic fairness' and 'encouraging consensus'"
(p. 90).
[The phrases "democratic fairness" and "encouraging
consensus" are already in quotation marks in Dahl's sentence.]
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Indicating Changes in Quotations
| Quoting
Only a Portion of the Whole |
Use ellipsis points
(. . .) to indicate an omission within a quotation--but not at the
beginning or end unless it's not obvious that you're quoting only
a portion of the whole. |
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| Adding
Clarification, Comment, or Correction |
Within quotations, use square
brackets [ ] (not parentheses) to add your own clarification,
comment, or correction.
Use [sic] (meaning "so" or "thus") to indicate
that a mistake is in the source you?re quoting and is not your own.
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Notes
1. "The Conceptual
Poverty of U.S. Foreign Policy," Atlantic, September 1993,
55.
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