When you support ideas you give textual evidence to explain an  reflection, or analysis.Textual evidence consists of words   a  and presented as evidence in support of an idea. First, to support ideas,  or  something in the text:Quote a group of words to copy part of the text exactly how it appears, or quotation. This group of words is called a quote or a  A quote is surrounded by   “ .”(Example: The author says, “The location of the tomb is still unknown.”)Paraphrase to summarize part of the text in new words.(Example: No one has found the tomb yet.)After quoting or paraphrasing text, then make a claim about it:A claim  an  that you have based on the text.(Example: The tomb must be well hidden because no one has found where it is yet.)

marksparaphrasetakenquotefromstatestextquotationword

The marks indicate that the words are a quote taken from the original text. A paraphrase is a restatement of the original text in new words. The word "quote" is used to refer to a group of words that are copied exactly from the text. The quotation is surrounded by quotation marks (" ").