Parenthetical citations reference the original sources that are used in an essay or paper. <u>It immediately tells the reader where your data is coming from, and shourtcuts the unnecessary trouble of having to make footnotes</u>.
For print sources like books, magazines, <u>or the encyclopidia given in your example</u>, you have to provide the author's last name and the page number in the source material from where your citation comes from.
It would look like this: "After the Civil War, the amount of counterfeit money in circulation was a big problem for the government" (Ray 34).
When it comes to electronic sources, the absence of page numbers should not be a problem in creating parenthetical citations. All you have to do is provide the author's or article's name; and unless you must list the website's URL to give the reader a direct entry to the page, do not include entire URLs in the text. Instead, provide partial URLs like the name of the website or its domain.
In this case, your example would look like this: "After the Civil War, the amount of counterfeit money in circulation was a big problem for the government" (Know Your Money, Secretservice.gov).
Hope this helps!
The Senate must approve of most of the presidential actions. The Senate could reject many presidential actions too
where's the model? I think you forgot to put the picture (◍•ᴗ•◍)
The discovery of farming marked the break between two time periods that are stone age and copper age.
When we categorize the history into time periods, this is called ages. A <span>time period between the Neolithic and the Bronze </span>Age is the copper age and the <span>Paleolithic is the earliest period of the Stone Age.</span>
Answer:
1: Yes.
2: I don't know.
3: They felt I think offended so the opposed the war.
4: It was a memorable thing to remember.
5: Maybe because they didn't have enough courage in order to go to war.