In a citation within a Works Cited page, which of the following should NOT be in italics?
(1 point)
Responses
the title of a book
the title of a book
the title of an editorial
the title of an editorial
the title of an encyclopedi
the title of an editorial
You finished writing a research paper on the way modern technology affects communication within families. Now you need to include the citation for an editorial published in the Sacramento Gazette titled “Should We Just Text Our Children?” However, you don’t have the author’s name available. Which of the following would be the correct citation for the editorial?
(1 point)
Responses
“Should We Just Text Our Children?” Editorial. Sacramento Gazette. 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
“Should We Just Text Our Children?” Editorial. Sacramento Gazette . 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
N/A. “Should We Just Text Our Children?” Sacramento Gazette. 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
N/A. “Should We Just Text Our Children?” Sacramento Gazette . 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
“Should We Just Text Our Children?” Editorial. Sacramento Gazette. 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
"Should We Just Text Our Children?" Editorial. Sacramento Gazette. 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
should it have italics or no?
In the citation provided, the title of the editorial, "Should We Just Text Our Children?", should be in italics. Here is the corrected citation:
"Should We Just Text Our Children?" Editorial. Sacramento Gazette. 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
should sacramento gazette in italics?
In the citation provided, "Sacramento Gazette" should not be in italics. Only the title of the editorial, "Should We Just Text Our Children?", should be in italics in a citation within a Works Cited page. Here is the corrected citation:
"Should We Just Text Our Children?" Editorial. Sacramento Gazette. 5 Dec. 2002: A4.
In a Works Cited page, how are sources organized?
(1 point)
Responses
in alphabetical order
in alphabetical order
in order of appearance in the paper
in order of appearance in the paper
in groups, based on the type of source