he watched family guy. how embarrassing.
he watched family guy. how embarrassing.
That was funny .
Why is IronMexican such a hipster?
Because being emo is passe?
I think it's his deep hatred for his own race.
That's what I said. 'Cept I did it in snooty women's studies language.
!!!Why do the good die young???
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So Billy Joel can sing about them?
I'll give $1 to the first person who can answer this question...someone has to know this. in APA style...
I have a block quote from an author with two sources within a paper. How do I cite it so the reader knows which article to go to to find the quote?
Are the articles from different years?
If so, then you say, "Smith (1998) reports . . . "
If they are from the same year, then the citations should be designated as "1998a" and 1998b" in your list of references.
That I know, soog, it's the in text citation that I'm having trouble with. Like
blockquote blah blah blah blah 40 words (Author, page)
Do I put an A/B in there to designate the year? Oh and to it up even more I think they have the same page numbers. Because if they had different page numbers it wouldn't matter, but their policy analysis so they're just PDFs from a websites numbered 1-whatever.
Yes, the format is (Author, year, page)
http://www.write.armstrong.edu/handouts/APAstyle.pdf
She stated, "The placebo effect disappeared when behaviors were studied in this manner" (Miele, 1993, p. 276), but she did not clarify which behaviors were studied.
I'm just not 100% sure if that's the same for block quotes. I saw that in the manual. It's literally verbatim. I e-mailed our little Writing Center person like an hour ago hoping for an answer tonight because she's in California but no dice as of yet.
If you haven't earlier in the paper, mention the article when you introduce the quote. Avoid the whole problem.
In her 1994 article, "Leprechauns and Those Who Love Them," Gracie Gracerton eluded to the uncommonly close bond formed within leprechaun-human relationships:
Blah, blah, blah, etc.
for however many lines it takes
to get through the block quote
and cite page number at the end (195).
Alluded.
Bite me.
Promises, promises.
This takes so much more work though. Damnit.
More time/work than scouring the interwebs and waiting for the Writing Center to return your email?
Ask your local librarian for assistance.
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