Using the authors name as part of your sentence.
How to reference a direct quote from another author in an article. An in-text citation is required if you paraphrase use someone elses ideas in your own words summarise use a brief account of someone elses ideas quote use someone elses exact words or copy use someone elses figures tables or structure. If you are quoting someone word-for-word or using someone elses ideas or statistics in your writing you will need to reference it within the body of your work. In your in-text citation identify the primary source and include in parentheses as cited in Author Date.
In your in-text citation identify the primary source and include in parentheses as cited in Author Date. The article you are reading is called the secondary source. The purpose is to give basic details so your reader can get more information from the list at the end.
For example suppose you are reading an article by Brown 2014 that cites information from an article by Snow 1982 that you would like to include in your essay. Adding a citation at the end of a sentence. When youre writing use direct quotes sparingly because the essay or article is supposed to be your original work.
Visit the APA Help guide to see examples. For a direct quote - state the authors surnames without initials year of publication and the page number within brackets. The format of the quotation and the in-text citation depends on the length of the quotation.
The family names of all the authors. In the examples below Smiths study is the primary source and Queenan et al. A direct quotation is a verbatim reproduction from another work.
Use them for emphasis when the reader needs to see the exact words for analysis and evidence or when the exact quote encapsulates the topic at hand more succinctly or better than you could. There are two options for in-text referencing. In the examples below Smiths study is the primary source and Queenan et al.