Cite Your Sources

Find all the resources you need for citing sources
  • URL: https://libguides.enc.edu/citations
  • Direct Quotations & Paraphrasing

    In-Text Citations

    After a quote, add the author's last name and a page number/reference. This is usually enough to identify the source and the specific location from which you borrowed the material.

    Example: "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" (Seuss, 102-103).

    If using the author's name in your text, do not include it in the parentheses.

    Example: In his scholarly study, Dr. Seuss observed that "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" (102-103).

    If more than one author has the same last name, add their first initial.

    Example: "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" (D. Seuss, 102-103).

    If two or more authors wrote the work, list them all.

    Example: "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" (Seuss & Johnson, 102-103).

    If no pagination information is available, but paragraphs are numbered, include that information.

    Example: "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog" (Seuss, par. 5).

    If no pagination information is available and paragraphs are not numbered, the work must be cited only in its entirety, but you can include words in your text that indicate about where to find the quote.

    Example: In the first third of his article, Seuss mentioned that "the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog."

    Note: When paraphrasing or mentioning another work, it is helpful to still provide pagination information if the source text is long or difficult, or if it would help the reader find the text being paraphrased.