Skip to Main Content

MLA and APA Citations: Home

mla, apa, citation style, how-to

Why Cite?

  • Give credit to other researchers and acknowledge their ideas
  • Demonstrate the authenticity of the information
  • Enable readers to locate the information

E-Books

Everything You Need to Know About MLA Citations


The Complete Guide to Referencing and Avoiding Plagiarism

MLA and APA Citation Styles

MLA Handbook  

When in Doubt, Cite!

Use your own words and ideas

  • Use quotation marks and cite the source if you repeat another’s exact words
  • Cite if you adapt a chart or paraphrase a sentence (paraphrasing is when you state someone else’s ideas in your own words)
  • Avoid using others’ work with minor changes:

Using synonyms (e.g.: using “less” for “fewer”)

Reversing the order of a sentence

  • You don't have to cite "common knowledge," but it must be commonly known.

Common knowledge: Abraham Lincoln was the U.S. President during the Civil War.

Not common knowledge: There were 51,000 casualties at the Battle of Gettysburg.

Common knowledge: Joseph Stalin was born in Georgia.

Not common knowledge: Stalin was poisoned*.

     *Jonathan Brent, Vladimir Naumov. Stalin's Last Crime : The Plot Against the Jewish Doctors, 1948-1953.    HarperCollins, 2003

Subject Guide