This page covers how to incorporate sources into your text through quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing.
These guidelines will help you to avoid unintentional plagiarism. Any quote, paraphrase, or summary needs to be accompanied by an in-text citation that identifies what work you are referring to. This gives credit to the people you have learned from and shows the process of your work.
The guidelines on this page apply to any citation style, though the different styles may have specific rules for some details like formatting a block quote. The following are helpful tutorials about incorporating sources directly from the APA and the MLA.
Direct Quotations and Paraphrases
Learn how to cite and format direct quotations in APA Style, including short quotations and block quotations; make and indicate changes to quotations; and cite paraphrased material.
Academic Writer // © 2023 American Psychological Association.
When you quote a source, you reproduce or repeat a passage or phrase exactly and use quotation marks around the quoted text.
Quotes are exact duplicates of text.
Style guides generally advise that you quote sparingly. A quote is a good idea in these situations:
When you paraphrase, you express the meaning of a written or spoken passage, or the words of an author or speaker using different words.
Paraphrasing is used when the detail of a passage is important, but the exact wording is not important.
Paraphrase when the details of a section of text are important.
When you summarize, you communicate the main ideas of what you have learned from a source, without including much detail.
Summarize when there are long passages that have important main ideas.