Article: How you make the in-text citation depends on what kind of source you pulled the quote from. Provide a word or phrase (the author’s name) and the page number. If you state the word or phrase in the sentence, you do not need to add it to the in-text citation. If there are three or less authors, list all of the authors’ last names in alphabetical order within the parentheses followed by the page number. If there are more than three authors, write the last name of the author who appears first in the alphabet, followed by "et al." and the page number. Use a shortened title of the work in place of an author’s name. List either the web page’s author, website name, or article name in parentheses. You do not need to put a page number. Include the first item that appears in that source's listing on the Works Cited page--usually the interviewee's last name. This is where you list the full bibliographical information for each source that you quoted or cited in your paper. You should list your sources in alphabetical order. Use the following formats:
What is a summary of what this article is about?
Place a parenthetical, in-text citation as soon as possible after the quote. Create an in-text citation of a publication with a known author (book, magazine, journal article, newspaper). Create an in-text citation of a work with multiple authors. Create an in-text citation of a work with no known author. Create an in-text citation for a web page. Create an in-text citation for an interview or personal communication. Create a Works Cited page.