Citing Multiple paragraphs MLA












1















Had a quick question about how I should cite with multiple paragraphs (MLA).



Here is how the text appears in the source (The Great Gatsby):



     'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
wears a pink suit.'

'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
something like that'.


Would I cite it like this:



... with the following exchange: "'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit'. 'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man'. 'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or something like that'."



Or would I use a block quotation like this:



... with the following exchange:



     'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
wears a pink suit.'

'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
something like that'.


Thanks for the help!










share|improve this question









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SarahL is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    1















    Had a quick question about how I should cite with multiple paragraphs (MLA).



    Here is how the text appears in the source (The Great Gatsby):



         'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
    wears a pink suit.'

    'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

    'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
    something like that'.


    Would I cite it like this:



    ... with the following exchange: "'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit'. 'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man'. 'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or something like that'."



    Or would I use a block quotation like this:



    ... with the following exchange:



         'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
    wears a pink suit.'

    'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

    'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
    something like that'.


    Thanks for the help!










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    SarahL is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      Had a quick question about how I should cite with multiple paragraphs (MLA).



      Here is how the text appears in the source (The Great Gatsby):



           'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
      wears a pink suit.'

      'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

      'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
      something like that'.


      Would I cite it like this:



      ... with the following exchange: "'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit'. 'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man'. 'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or something like that'."



      Or would I use a block quotation like this:



      ... with the following exchange:



           'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
      wears a pink suit.'

      'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

      'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
      something like that'.


      Thanks for the help!










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      SarahL is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      Had a quick question about how I should cite with multiple paragraphs (MLA).



      Here is how the text appears in the source (The Great Gatsby):



           'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
      wears a pink suit.'

      'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

      'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
      something like that'.


      Would I cite it like this:



      ... with the following exchange: "'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit'. 'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man'. 'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or something like that'."



      Or would I use a block quotation like this:



      ... with the following exchange:



           'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He 
      wears a pink suit.'

      'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

      'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
      something like that'.


      Thanks for the help!







      structure citation dialogue paragraphs mla






      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      SarahL is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      SarahL is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 1 at 1:00







      SarahL













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      asked Apr 1 at 0:47









      SarahLSarahL

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      New contributor





      SarahL is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















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          The MLA Handbook (8th ed.), 1.3.7, says:




          Do not use opening and closing quotation marks to enclose quotations set off from the text, but reproduce any quotation marks that are in the passage quoted.



          In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O."), recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison:



                I was so out of things, I'd never heard

                of the Jehovah's Witnesses.

                "Are you a C.O.?" I asked a fellow jailbird.

                "No," he answered, "I'm a J.W." (36-39)




          By "set off from the text," it means a block quote, which has a left-margin indent.



          Notice that it uses a block quote for the lines of text, and then provides the citation (36-39), which, in this case, is citing line numbers rather than page numbers because "Memories of West Street and Lekpke" is a poem.





          It does, however, provide a different style where a block quote is not used:




          Use double quotation marks around quotations incorporated into the text and single quotation marks around quotations within those quotations.



          In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O.)", recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison: "'Are you a C.O.?' I asked a fellow jailbird. / 'No, he answered, 'I'm a J.W.'" (38-39)




          Notice the difference in quotation marks when no block quote is used, and how a slash (/) character indicates a line break in the poem. A stanza break would be indicated by a double slash (//).





          MLA, 1.3.3, says this about poetry:




          Verse quotations of more than three lines should be set off from your text as a block.




          For quotes of prose, MLA 1.3.2 says:




          If a quotation extends to more than four lines when run into your text, set it off from the text as a block indented half an inch from the left margin.




          I would certainly use a block quote for your example text. If nothing else, it simply looks better.




          In The Great Gatsby is the following exchange:



                 'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit.'

                 'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

                'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
          something like that'. (50)




          The (50) I used in that is just an arbitrary page number I made up.






          share|improve this answer


























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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

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            1 Answer
            1






            active

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            active

            oldest

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            active

            oldest

            votes









            0














            The MLA Handbook (8th ed.), 1.3.7, says:




            Do not use opening and closing quotation marks to enclose quotations set off from the text, but reproduce any quotation marks that are in the passage quoted.



            In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O."), recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison:



                  I was so out of things, I'd never heard

                  of the Jehovah's Witnesses.

                  "Are you a C.O.?" I asked a fellow jailbird.

                  "No," he answered, "I'm a J.W." (36-39)




            By "set off from the text," it means a block quote, which has a left-margin indent.



            Notice that it uses a block quote for the lines of text, and then provides the citation (36-39), which, in this case, is citing line numbers rather than page numbers because "Memories of West Street and Lekpke" is a poem.





            It does, however, provide a different style where a block quote is not used:




            Use double quotation marks around quotations incorporated into the text and single quotation marks around quotations within those quotations.



            In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O.)", recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison: "'Are you a C.O.?' I asked a fellow jailbird. / 'No, he answered, 'I'm a J.W.'" (38-39)




            Notice the difference in quotation marks when no block quote is used, and how a slash (/) character indicates a line break in the poem. A stanza break would be indicated by a double slash (//).





            MLA, 1.3.3, says this about poetry:




            Verse quotations of more than three lines should be set off from your text as a block.




            For quotes of prose, MLA 1.3.2 says:




            If a quotation extends to more than four lines when run into your text, set it off from the text as a block indented half an inch from the left margin.




            I would certainly use a block quote for your example text. If nothing else, it simply looks better.




            In The Great Gatsby is the following exchange:



                   'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit.'

                   'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

                  'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
            something like that'. (50)




            The (50) I used in that is just an arbitrary page number I made up.






            share|improve this answer






























              0














              The MLA Handbook (8th ed.), 1.3.7, says:




              Do not use opening and closing quotation marks to enclose quotations set off from the text, but reproduce any quotation marks that are in the passage quoted.



              In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O."), recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison:



                    I was so out of things, I'd never heard

                    of the Jehovah's Witnesses.

                    "Are you a C.O.?" I asked a fellow jailbird.

                    "No," he answered, "I'm a J.W." (36-39)




              By "set off from the text," it means a block quote, which has a left-margin indent.



              Notice that it uses a block quote for the lines of text, and then provides the citation (36-39), which, in this case, is citing line numbers rather than page numbers because "Memories of West Street and Lekpke" is a poem.





              It does, however, provide a different style where a block quote is not used:




              Use double quotation marks around quotations incorporated into the text and single quotation marks around quotations within those quotations.



              In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O.)", recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison: "'Are you a C.O.?' I asked a fellow jailbird. / 'No, he answered, 'I'm a J.W.'" (38-39)




              Notice the difference in quotation marks when no block quote is used, and how a slash (/) character indicates a line break in the poem. A stanza break would be indicated by a double slash (//).





              MLA, 1.3.3, says this about poetry:




              Verse quotations of more than three lines should be set off from your text as a block.




              For quotes of prose, MLA 1.3.2 says:




              If a quotation extends to more than four lines when run into your text, set it off from the text as a block indented half an inch from the left margin.




              I would certainly use a block quote for your example text. If nothing else, it simply looks better.




              In The Great Gatsby is the following exchange:



                     'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit.'

                     'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

                    'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
              something like that'. (50)




              The (50) I used in that is just an arbitrary page number I made up.






              share|improve this answer




























                0












                0








                0







                The MLA Handbook (8th ed.), 1.3.7, says:




                Do not use opening and closing quotation marks to enclose quotations set off from the text, but reproduce any quotation marks that are in the passage quoted.



                In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O."), recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison:



                      I was so out of things, I'd never heard

                      of the Jehovah's Witnesses.

                      "Are you a C.O.?" I asked a fellow jailbird.

                      "No," he answered, "I'm a J.W." (36-39)




                By "set off from the text," it means a block quote, which has a left-margin indent.



                Notice that it uses a block quote for the lines of text, and then provides the citation (36-39), which, in this case, is citing line numbers rather than page numbers because "Memories of West Street and Lekpke" is a poem.





                It does, however, provide a different style where a block quote is not used:




                Use double quotation marks around quotations incorporated into the text and single quotation marks around quotations within those quotations.



                In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O.)", recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison: "'Are you a C.O.?' I asked a fellow jailbird. / 'No, he answered, 'I'm a J.W.'" (38-39)




                Notice the difference in quotation marks when no block quote is used, and how a slash (/) character indicates a line break in the poem. A stanza break would be indicated by a double slash (//).





                MLA, 1.3.3, says this about poetry:




                Verse quotations of more than three lines should be set off from your text as a block.




                For quotes of prose, MLA 1.3.2 says:




                If a quotation extends to more than four lines when run into your text, set it off from the text as a block indented half an inch from the left margin.




                I would certainly use a block quote for your example text. If nothing else, it simply looks better.




                In The Great Gatsby is the following exchange:



                       'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit.'

                       'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

                      'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
                something like that'. (50)




                The (50) I used in that is just an arbitrary page number I made up.






                share|improve this answer















                The MLA Handbook (8th ed.), 1.3.7, says:




                Do not use opening and closing quotation marks to enclose quotations set off from the text, but reproduce any quotation marks that are in the passage quoted.



                In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O."), recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison:



                      I was so out of things, I'd never heard

                      of the Jehovah's Witnesses.

                      "Are you a C.O.?" I asked a fellow jailbird.

                      "No," he answered, "I'm a J.W." (36-39)




                By "set off from the text," it means a block quote, which has a left-margin indent.



                Notice that it uses a block quote for the lines of text, and then provides the citation (36-39), which, in this case, is citing line numbers rather than page numbers because "Memories of West Street and Lekpke" is a poem.





                It does, however, provide a different style where a block quote is not used:




                Use double quotation marks around quotations incorporated into the text and single quotation marks around quotations within those quotations.



                In "Memories of West Street and Lekpke," Robert Lowell, a conscientious objector (or "C.O.)", recounts meeting a Jehovah's Witness in prison: "'Are you a C.O.?' I asked a fellow jailbird. / 'No, he answered, 'I'm a J.W.'" (38-39)




                Notice the difference in quotation marks when no block quote is used, and how a slash (/) character indicates a line break in the poem. A stanza break would be indicated by a double slash (//).





                MLA, 1.3.3, says this about poetry:




                Verse quotations of more than three lines should be set off from your text as a block.




                For quotes of prose, MLA 1.3.2 says:




                If a quotation extends to more than four lines when run into your text, set it off from the text as a block indented half an inch from the left margin.




                I would certainly use a block quote for your example text. If nothing else, it simply looks better.




                In The Great Gatsby is the following exchange:



                       'An Oxford man!' He was incredulous. 'Like hell he is! He wears a pink suit.'

                       'Nevertheless he's an Oxford man.'

                      'Oxford, New Mexico,' snorted Tom contemptuously, 'or
                something like that'. (50)




                The (50) I used in that is just an arbitrary page number I made up.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Apr 1 at 1:40

























                answered Apr 1 at 1:35









                Jason BassfordJason Bassford

                19.4k32246




                19.4k32246






















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