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MLA Style Guide 9th Edition

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Journal Article with 2 Authors, Online

 

When referencing a journal article, be sure to include the title of the article (source), and the name of the journal (container) it was published in, and the database (container 2). Include any volume and/or number information as applicable.

When you access a journal article electronically, be sure to include the URL or DOI as the location in the works cited entry.

 

2 Authors

TEMPLATE:

Last, First, and First Last. "Title of Article in Quotations." Name of Journal in Italics, vol. #, no. #, Date, pp. first page-last page. Database, location (link or DOI).

 

EXAMPLE:

Yang, Ruby Pi-Ju, and Kimberly A Noels. "The Possible Selves of International Students and their Cross-Cultural Adjustment in Canada." International Journal of Psychology, vol. 48, no. 3, June 2013, pp. 316-23. ERIC, https://doi.org/10.1080/00207594.2012.660461.

There are different ways to format an in-text citation, depending on your writing style and sentence structure. Every in-text citation must include the author's last name and page number. Formatting examples are outlined below:

Reference Information

Yang, Ruby Pi‐Ju, and Kimberly A. Noels. “The Possible Selves of International Students and Their Cross-Cultural Adjustment in Canada.” International Journal of Psychology, vol. 48, no. 3, June 2013, pp. 316–323. Academic Search Complete, https://doi.org/10.1080/00207594.2012.660161. 

In-text Citation Guidelines

Examples                                                                                                           

 

Include the authors' last names and page number placed in brackets at the end of a sentence.

 

Consider this a paraphrased sentence (Yang and Noels 319).                        

 

Include both author's names as part of the sentence; include the page number in brackets. The first time the authors are mentioned in text use their full name (excluding middle initials), and use their last name's only after that.

 

According to Ruby Yang and Kimberly Noels, "consider this a direct quote" (319). Yang and Noels go on to argue that this is a paraphrased sentence (320).

Remember, in-text citation formatting changes depending on a number of factors.