MLA Source Bibliography for Works Cited Page



This worksheet will help you to assemble the necessary information, in the proper order for your MLA Works Cited page of your research paper. You must have 6 sources on your topic included on your Preliminary Works Cited page: 4 online database sources and 2 internet or book sources.BOOK Information you’ll need to cite a book:Information Needed:Punctuation: Your Source Information:Author(s) or EditorLast name, first name, middle if any (,ed. for editor) followed by a period .Title of BookIn italics followed by a period .Edition (if other than 1st)# ed.Place of PublicationFollowed by a colon :Publisher’s NameFollowed by a comma ,Date of PublicationFollowed by a period .Medium of PublicationFollowed by a period Print.McGonegal, Arnold, and Charlotte Weathers. Wild Women Archetypes. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall., 1995. Print. WEBSITE Information you’ll need to cite a website:Information Needed:Punctuation:Your Source Information:Author(s) if anyLast name, first name followed by a period .Title of articleIn quotes—followed by a period inside quotes “ .”Title of websiteIn italics followed by a period .Name of Agency/PublisherFollowed by a period .Use n.p. if no publisher is givenDate last updatedFollowed by a period .Use n.d. if no date is givenMedium of PublicationFollowed by a period Web.Date accessedDate, abb. Month, then year followed by a period .Web address starting with http:// (include on Works Cited page if publisher & last update are NOT given) Put in between brackets and followed by a period < >. Felluga, Dino.? Guide to Literary and Critical Theory. Purdue U. 28 Nov. 2010. Web. 10 May 2012.DATABASE ARTICLE Information you’ll need to cite an article from a database:Information Needed:Punctuation:Your Source Information:AuthorLast name, first name followed by a period .Title of ArticleIn quotes followed by a period inside quotes “ .”Title of JournalIn italics no punctuation afterVolume number (if any)Followed by a period .Issue number (if any)Followed by a spaceDate of PublicationIn parentheses followed by a colon ( ): Page #s of articleFollowed by a period .Name of databaseIn italics followed by a period .Medium of PublicationFollowed by a period Web.Date accessedDay, abb. Month, then year followed by a period . Scragg, Leah. “The Form of Things Unknown: Renaissance Metaphor in Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The Review of English Studies. 48. 92 (Nov. 1997): 526-28. Literature Resource Center. Web. 27 Oct. 2012.For more information and examples, see: games that will help you understand MLA: ................
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