A citation or bibliographic citation is a reference to a book, article, web page, or other published item with sufficient details to uniquely identify the item. Unpublished writings or speech, such as working papers or personal communications, are also sometimes cited. Citations are provided in scholarly works, bibliographies and indexes. The word citation may be used of the act of citing a work as well as to a reference itself. You may get help from http://www.nicetermpaper.com
2006-12-16 15:54:17
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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When you cite a reference for a paper you are providing the location of where you got the information.
A cite in a citation is probably just a loose use of the language. I've never heard anyone say this.
When you quote something or use information from someone else's work you are making a citation. This also can be described as citing the information.
Rarely should you cite a citation because then you would be citing someone else's citation, not the original work. Ideally you should obtain the original work and cite that. You shouldn't pretend to cite the original source when you haven't used it directly.
2006-12-16 16:48:21
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answer #2
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answered by tfedge 3
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when you do a research paper you need to prove your facts by saying or citing where you got them from, both at the end of your paper and parethetically in your paper. Basically you are saying you believe something and that these experts and facts back you up. You tell people who the experts are, and what the facts are. You need to say whose work it is , otherwise its plagiarism. Go to www.citationmachine.net, they will help you do your citations. If you are willing to spend some money Style Ease formatting program is excellent.
2006-12-16 15:40:38
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answer #3
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answered by fancyname 6
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It means the person is mentioning excerpts from a citation ..
2006-12-16 16:02:38
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answer #4
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answered by ? 7
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