QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- for your reference list at the end of your paper, which of these is the correct way to refer to a quote that you used within your paper?
□ a. author, a. a. (year). title of book. place: publisher.
□ b. author, a. a. year. title of book. publisher.
□ c. neither is correct.
- how do you write up a periodical article, with three authors, on your reference list?
□ author, a. a., author, b. b., & author, c. c. (year). title of article. title of periodical, volume number(issue number), pages.
□ author, a. a., author, b. b., & author, c. c. (year). \title of article.\ title of periodical, volume number: issue number, pages.
□ author, a. a., et al. (year). title of article. title of periodical, volume number(issue number), pages.
- how do you include an electronic source on your reference list if there is no author name?
□ a. feminism. (no date). in encyclopedia britannica. retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/ebchecked/topic/724633/feminism
□ b. \feminism.\ (n.d.). in encyclopedia britannica online. retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/ebchecked/topic/724633/feminism
□ c. feminism. (n.d.). in encyclopedia britannica online. retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/ebchecked/topic/724633/feminism
- the first line of each entry on the reference list is flush with the left margin and the
Question 16
In APA (a common citation style), a book reference should be in the format: Author, A. A. (Year). Title of book. Place: Publisher. Option a has "Title of Book" (capitalized as a title, but the key is the structure with (year), place, publisher). Option b misses the place and has "Year" without parentheses. So neither a (if "Title of Book" is a formatting error in the option, but the structure of a is closer but still, actually, the correct book reference in APA is Author, A. A. (Year). Title of book. Place: Publisher. Wait, maybe the options have typos. But between a and b, a has (year) which is correct for APA, but the title case? Wait, no— the main issue is that option a has "Place: Publisher" and option b has no place. But actually, the correct book citation is Author, A. A. (Year). Title of book. Place: Publisher. So option a is the correct structure (assuming "Title of Book" is just a placeholder). Wait, maybe the question is about a different style? Wait, no— let's recheck. Option a: Author, A. A. (year). Title of Book. Place: Publisher. Option b: Author, A. A. Year. Title of book. Publisher. So in APA, the year is in parentheses. So option a has the correct structure for a book reference (with year in parentheses, place and publisher). So the correct answer is a.
For a periodical article with three authors in APA, the format is: Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). "Title of article." Title of Periodical, volume number(issue number), pages. Wait, no— the title of the article should be in quotation marks? Wait, no— in APA, the article title is in sentence case, not in quotation marks. Wait, no— actually, in APA 7th edition, the article title is in sentence case (only first word and proper nouns capitalized) and is not in quotation marks. The periodical title is in title case and italicized. So the correct format is: Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, volume number(issue number), pages. Wait, but the options: first option: Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, volume number(issue number), pages. Second option: has "Title of article" in quotes. Third option: uses et al. But for three authors, we list all three. So the first option is correct? Wait, no— let's check APA 7th: Article citation: Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, volume(issue), pages. So the first option matches this (without quotes around the article title, volume number(issue number)). The second option has quotes around the article title (incorrect in APA), the third uses et al. (incorrect for three authors, we list all three). So the first option is correct.
For an electronic source with no author in APA, the format is: Title of source. (n.d.). In Title of larger work (if applicable). Retrieved from URL. So the title should be in sentence case (or title case? Wait, in APA, the title of the source (when no author) is in sentence case (first word capitalized, others lowercase unless proper nouns). Also, "n.d." for no date. The larger work (Encyclopedia Britannica online) should be italicized? Wait, the options:
a. Feminism. (no date). In Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved from... — "Encyclopedia Britannica" not italicized, and "no date" should be (n.d.).
b. "Feminism." (n.d.). In Encyclopedia Britannica online. Retrieved from... — article title in quotes (incorrect, should be in sentence case without quotes).
c. Feminism. (n.d.). In Encyclopedia Britannica online. Retrieved from... — this follows: Title (Feminism) in sentence case (first word capitalized), (n.d.) for no date, "In Encyclopedia Britannica online" (italicized? Wait, Encyclopedia Britannica online is a larger work, should be italicized. But among the options, c has the correct structure: title (Feminism) without quotes, (n.d.), "In Encyclopedia Britannica online" (assuming "Encyclopedia Britannica online" is italicized in the actual format, but the option c's structure is correct: title, (n.d.), in larger work, retrieved from URL. Option a has "Encyclopedia Britannica" (not online, and "no date" instead of (n.d.)). Option b has quotes around the title. So option c is correct.
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a. Author, A. A. (year). Title of Book. Place: Publisher.