For a in-text citation do you place a source without a author with quotations and parentheses?

Ahh -- you must be having an identity crisis -- m/P/Patrick/Woody.

Yes.

I am new person?

Can you show me a example?

All of you are posting from the same computer in Indiana.

Please use the same name for your posts.

Put the quotation in quotation marks. Put the source in parentheses.

Study this site very carefully. You'll find examples.

http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/02/

Like this “you’re ready to go do something else’’ (“Jordan”).

No.

Study that site more carefully.

Take out the quotes around jordan

Yes. Now it's right.

When citing a source without an author in-text, you typically use the title of the source in the citation. However, you don't need to use both quotations and parentheses in this case. Instead, you should use either quotations or parentheses, depending on your citation style.

Here's how you can format an in-text citation without an author using quotations:

1. Place the title of the source in quotation marks.
2. Include the title within the sentence or immediately following it.
3. Provide the page number (if available) or a paragraph number (if page numbers are not applicable, such as for online sources).

Example:
According to the article "Understanding Climate Change" (2021), the effects of global warming are becoming increasingly severe (p. 25).

Here's an alternative format using parentheses:

1. Place the title of the source inside parentheses, without quotation marks.
2. Include the title within the sentence or immediately preceding it.
3. Use a shortened version of the title if it is long.

Example:
The evidence suggests that the effects of global warming are becoming increasingly severe ("Understanding Climate Change," 2021, p. 25).

Remember to consult the specific citation style you are using (e.g., APA, MLA, Chicago) as each style may have slightly different guidelines for formatting in-text citations without authors.