Add quote in the Articles of Association

Aug 6th, 2022
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How to add quote in the Articles of Association

4.9 out of 5
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So heres another thing that can be confusing with quoting your sources. Lets say that you have an author of a source who is quoting somebody else within the source, and you want to use that quote, so youve got kind of two people talking. Heres an example (this is the article Is Google Making Us Stupid? by Nicholas Carr). So Carr is the author, but within his article hes quoting other people. So right here we have Clive Thompson, and we have a quote from him. Lets say I want to use that quote, but how am I supposed to cite this. Whats my signal phrase going to look like? Well, lets lets try it out. So Im gonna grab this quote here and paste it into my document and so hes got his own signal phrase in here, but I dont want to keep it exactly how he has it because Im quoting Nicholas Carr, who was quoting Clive Thompson. I need to make that clear, so Im going to take this signal phrase out of the middle of this sentence, kind of combine it into one sentence here. thats t

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Quoting Directly Add an in-text citation at the end of the quote with the author name and page number, like this: Heres a direct quote (Smith 8). Heres a direct quote (Trouble 22). Note: The period goes outside the brackets, at the end of your in-text citation.
A basic reference list entry for a journal article in APA must include: Author or authors. Year of publication of the article (in round brackets). Article title. Journal title (in italics). Volume of journal (in italics). Issue number of journal in round brackets (no italics). Page range of article. DOI or URL.
An exact quote should be in quotation marks ( ), or if the quotation is 40 words or more, should be formatted as a block quotation. Then you put an In-Text Citation right after the quotation to show where the quote came from.
Quotation marks, double () or single (), are generally used for direct quotes, certain titles, and words used in a special manner. Quotation marks are ALWAYS used in pairs, one at the beginning of the quoted text and one at the end. The same rule applies to titles and words used in a special sense or for emphasis.
The name, date and page reference of the work in which information originated should appear first, followed by cited and then the name etc. of the work in which the information was found. Only the work you have read should appear in the reference list at the end of the work.
Quoting a Quote Citation List the original authors last name. Include the date of publication of the original. Add as cited in then the name of the work. Follow with the publishing date of the cited work. List the page the information can be found on.
In your in-text citation identify the primary source, and include in parentheses (as cited in Author, Date). The reference list will only list the secondary source. In the examples below, Smiths study is the primary source and Queenan et al. is the secondary (as cited in) source.
Your in-text citation should include both authors: the author(s) of the original source and the author(s) of the secondary source. For example: (Habermehl, 1985, as cited in Kersten, 1987). In your reference list you should provide the details of the secondary source (the source you read).

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