Works Cited: Easy Guide to Creating One


works cited

One of the most tedious parts of writing a research paper can be completing the works cited page at the end of the paper. However, while this can be frustrating and time-consuming for students, it is an absolutely necessary step for a great research paper. Works cited pages let your reader know what sources you used and provide the bibliographic information that they need to find those sources if they do additional information. They can keep you from facing allegations of plagiarism, as your reader can look to your works cited page and find information for any resources that you reference in your works. Perhaps most importantly, they provide a great starting point for additional research for anyone who reads your paper and is interested in the topic.

The downside to a works cited page is that it is very technical. It is not enough for you to provide the required information for a source; you must provide it in a very specific manner. Making it more confusing is the fact that the way it is written varies from citation style to citation and style and within citation style according to the type of source you are citing. This guide will help you master the intricacies of writing works cited lists in both APA and MLA format. While, unfortunately, we cannot promise to make creating a works cited list entertaining, we can promise to simplify the process for you, removing the uncertainty and making it less time-consuming!

Definition

What is a works cited page? You may have heard it called various names, including references, reference list, bibliography, or works referenced. Some students even prefer to omit the “s” and call it simply work cited. Whatever you choose to call it, a works cited page is a bibliography or works referenced page at the end of a research paper, essay, or other type of writing that includes references to sources.

A works cited page is written in the same style as the rest of your paper. There are a number of different writing styles used in academic writing and each has its own particular rules about how to write a works cited page. This guide is focused on the two styles you are most likely to encounter in undergraduate-level academic writing: APA and MLA. There are a number of differences between APA and MLA format, but one of the most noteworthy refers to the sources in the works cited page. In APA format, you may include references in your references pages, even if you do not quote them or cite them in the body of your paper, to show that you referenced them in your research. This distinguishes APA from MLA, where the works cited page should only contain works that you have cited in your research.

APA stands for the American Psychological Association. APA style is generally used within the social sciences, and may be used for the hard sciences when writing at an undergraduate level. There are multiple different versions of APA style. The current version is the 6th edition. Prior editions may have different rules. Unless your professor states otherwise, if you are asked to write a paper in APA format, assume that it is the current version. You can find the complete rules for APA style in the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th ed., 2nd printing.

MLA stands for the Modern Language Association of America. MLA style is generally used for English courses and the humanities, though it may be used in other courses, particularly at the high school level. MLA is an evolving style, with multiple different versions of the MLA style manual available. Previously, new editions of MLA have not contained major stylistic changes to the formatting of sources within the works cited page. However, the most recent edition contains some major changes that can make a significant impact on your work. Therefore, it is critical that you use the most recent edition of the MLA style manual, unless otherwise directed by your professor or teacher. We will be using this most recent edition, which is the 8th edition, published in 2016, for this guide.

How to Do a Works Cited Page

The basic steps for creating a works cited page are the same in both APA and MLA, though the format will vary. This section will cover those basic steps, but APA and MLA-specific sections will go into greater depth about the rules for each of the citation styles.

First, you need to compile a list of all the references that you have used while creating your paper. In our tutorials about how to write a research paper, we give several suggestions on how to manage resources to ensure that you have the bibliographic information you need to complete your works cited page. It is a good idea to make some type of notation as you work, so that you have easy access to this information when completing your paper and tackling your works cited list. Even if you have been including references as you worked, you want to double-check to make sure that every reference you use in the paper is included in your list; omitting a citation from your references page can be considered plagiarism.

Next, you want to handle the technical details. Your works cited page needs to be at the end of your paper. It begins on its own page. To ensure that you are on a new page and that your pagination will not be impacted by any revisions to the work, hit the Page Break button, which will start your text on a new page. Your works cited page should be numbered in the same way as the rest of your paper, which your computer should do as long as you use the Page Break function.

Place the title of the page in the center of the page. Which title you will use depends on the format that you are using. In MLA style, the correct title is works cited, in APA style the correct title is References. Title the page References, centered, in plain text, at the top of the page. Use double-spacing on the works cited page, just like you do throughout the essay. List your source alphabetically. Usually the first author’s last name will be the first thing in the reference, but if there is no author skip “A,” “And,” and “The,” when alphabetizing. The first line of each citation will not be indented, but the subsequent lines will be indented 5 spaces.

There are some notable differences in MLA and APA citation style. First, in MLA style, Authors are listed by last name, first. In APA style, authors are listed by last name and initial. Second, in MLA style you capitalize most words in the citation; but in APA style you do not capitalize all of the words in the source, instead you only capitalize the first word and any proper nouns in the title and subtitle. Other differences will be explained later in the specific examples.

Rules

  1. Include every source that you cite in your paper.
  2. Begin the works cited on a new page, at the end of your paper.
  3. Label the works cited page at the top of the page, centered.
  4. Paginate the works cited page in the same manner as the rest of the paper.
  5. Alphabetize your sources using author last name.

Because MLA and APA style are different, we will look at two different templates.

APA Template

References

Author Last Name, A.A. (Year of Publication). Title of work: Subtitle. City, State: Publisher.

Last, A. A., & Last, B. B. (Year). Title: Subtitle. City, State: Publisher.

Author, A. A. (Year, Month Day). Article title. Retrieved from URL

Author, A.A. & Author, B.B. (Date of publication). Title of article, Title of Journal, volume number, page range. doi: xxxx/xxxxx or http://dx.doi.org/xxx.xxx.xxx

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of publication). Title of article. Title of Journal, volume number. Retrieved from URL

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year, Month Day). Title of article. Title of Newspaper. Retrieved from URL

MLA Template

Works Cited

Last Name, First Name. Title of Book. Publisher, Publication Date.

Last Name, First Name and First Name Last Name. Title. Publisher, Year of Publication. Name of Organization. Title. Publisher, Year.

Author Last, Author First. Title. Title of Website, Other contributors, Version or Edition, Volume, Number, Publisher, Publication Date, Pages or Paragraphs, URL or doi, Accessed Day Month Year.

Article name. (Date). In Encyclopedia name. Retrieved from URL

Last, First. “Article Name.” Periodical Name, vol., no., year of publication, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

Last, First. “Article Name.” Journal Name, vol., no., year of publication, URL or doi. Accessed Day Month Year.

Last, First. “Article Name.” Journal Name, vol., no., year of publication, pp. xxx-xxx, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

Last, First. “Article Name.” Newspaper Name, Day Month Year, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

Last name, First name of the creator. “Title of the film or video.” Title of the website, role of contributors and their First name Last name, Version, Numbers, Publisher, Publication date, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

Title of Movie. Directed by Director First and Last, Performances by First and Last Name(s), Studio, Year of Release.

Finding the Information that You Need

One of the problems that people encounter when citing to references is that the resource may not contain all of the information needed for the citation. So, for each source that you are trying to cite, you need to keep two things in mind. The first question to ask yourself is: what information do I need to complete this citation? The second question to ask yourself is: what information can I find from this resource? Sometimes, there will be gaps between the two. In those cases, you need to simply provide as much of the needed information as is available in the source. Using the same sources as examples, this guide will show you how to find the information for different sources and how to format that information into the correct format for a citation, then how to put those citations together to create a works cited.

This tutorial will not cover all of the possible types of sources; we do cover those more extensively in our citation tutorials. However, this tutorial does cover the most common types of resources that students use in their research. We accessed all of these resources online, so that you could use the websites and go to the resource, yourself, to see how to navigate and find the information.

APA Examples

Simple Book Format

The most basic format is a single-author book that is available in print.

Author Last Name, A.A. (Year of Publication). Title of work: Subtitle. City, State: Publisher.

Reference List Citation:

If the book had been a print version, the reference list citation for the book would be:

Stoker, B. (1897). Dracula: A mystery story. New York, N.Y.: W.R. Caldwell & Co.

To indicate that we found the reference on Google Books, we would cite it as:

Stoker, B. (1897). Dracula: A mystery story. New York, N.Y.: W.R. Caldwell & Co. Available from https://books.google.com/books?id=k39vHp5VeMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=dracula&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjK1tya54TUAhXMTSYKHQLkDM0Q6AEIMzAC#v=onepage&q=dracula&f=false

Book with Multiple Authors

When there are multiple authors for a source, each author is mentioned, in the order that they are listed on the book. This rule applies up to 7 authors. After that point, after the sixth author’s name provide ellipses and then conclude with the last author’s name.

Last, A. A., & Last, B. B. (Year). Title: Subtitle. City, State: Publisher.

For this example, we use Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman:

Reference List Citation:

If it had been a print book, the reference list citation would be:

Pratchett, T. & Gaiman, N. (2006). Good omens: The nice and accurate prophecies of Agnes Nutter, witch. New York, NY: Harpertorch.

To show that we found it on Google Books, then we cite it like this:

Pratchett, T. & Gaiman, N. (2006). Good omens: The nice and accurate prophecies of Agnes Nutter, witch. New York, NY: Harpertorch. Available from https://books.google.com/booksd=7erEbfDOcgkC&printsec=frontcover&dq=pratchett+and+gaiman&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwim2KC76oTUAhVESyYKHVf8AwYQ6AEILjAB# v=onepage&q=pratchett%20and%20gaiman&f=false

Translated or Edited Books with Authors

The basic format for an edited book with an author is:

Author, A. A. (Year). Title. E. E. Editor (Ed.). City, State: Publisher.

The basic format for a translated book is:

Author, A. A. (Year). Title. (T. T. Translator, Trans.) City, State: Publisher. (Original work published 1814)

Our example involves a translator:

Reference List Citation:

If it had been a print version, the reference list citation would be:

Marquez, G.G. (2003). 100 years of solitude. (G. Rabassa, Trans.) New York, NY: Harper Collins. (Original work published 1970).

To show that we found it on Google, the reference list citation would be:

Marquez, G.G. (2003). 100 years of solitude. (G. Rabassa, Trans.) New York, NY: Harper Collins. (Original work published 1970). Available from https://books.google.com/books?id=pgPWOaOctq8C&printsec=frontcover&dq=100+years+of+solitude&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiQxtSW8YTUAhXDXyYKHSlPBMsQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=100%20years%20of%20solitude&f=false.

Basic APA website citation format

Generally, websites are easier to use for in-text citations because they do not have page numbers; the URL can take you directly to the page.

While there are some types of information that requires a specialized format, the basic APA website citation format is very simple:

Author, A. A. (Year, Month Day). Article title. Retrieved from URL

Reference List Citation:

Chemaly, S. (2014, December 8). 50 actual facts about rape. Retrieved from

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/soraya-chemaly/50-facts-rape_b_2019338.html

Online Encyclopedias

In many online encyclopedias, there is no author information. Therefore, the article name takes the place of the author name. The generic format is:

Article name. (Date). In Encylopedia name. Retrieved from URL

Article Name: William Shakespeare

Encyclopedia Name: Wikipedia

URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare

Reference List Citation:

William Shakespeare. (2017, May 9). In Wikipedia. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare

Article from an Online Periodical (Magazine or Non-Scholarly Journal)

Author, A.A., & Author, B.B. (Date of publication). Title of article. Title of Online Periodical, volume number (issue number). Retrieved from URL

Reference List Citation:

Scherer, M. & Altman, A. (2017). Trump’s loyalty test. Time Magazine, 189 (20). Retrieved from http://time.com/4783929/president-trump-loyalty-test/? xid=homepage&pcd=hp-magmod

Article from an Online Scholarly Journal

The basic way of citing an article from an online periodical with an assigned DOI is:

Author, A.A. & Author, B.B. (Date of publication). Title of article, Title of Journal, volume number, page range. doi: xxxx/xxxxx or http://dx.doi.org/xxx.xxx.xxx

Reference List Citation:

Yardimci, V. H. & Yardimci, A.H. (2017). An unusual first manifestation of Hodgkin’s Lymphoma: Epitrochlear lymph node involvement- A case report and brief review of literature. J Investig Med High Impact Case Rep, 5(2). doi: 10.1177/2324709617706709

Scholarly Journal with No DOI

The basic format for an online scholarly journal with no doi is:

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of publication). Title of article. Title of Journal, volume number. Retrieved from URL

 

Reference List Citation:

Kovan, M. (2017). Capital punishment: a Buddhist critique. Journal of Buddhist Ethics, 21. Retrieved from http://blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/

Newspaper Articles

Newspapers are another popular online resource. The basic citation for a newspaper article is simple:

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year, Month Day). Title of article. Title of Newspaper. Retrieved from URL

Reference List Citation:

Takahashi, J. (2017, May 19). Judge dismisses Ahmed Mohamed ‘Clock Boy’ suit against Irving ISD. Houston Chronicle. Retrieved from http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Judge-dismisses-Ahmed-Mohamed-Clock-Boy-suit-11159334.php

Videos available on the internet

While you can find videos in a number of different locations, it is now probably the most common to find videos on the internet using services like YouTube.

The basic format for citing a video available on the internet in APA format is very simple:

Author, A. A. [Screen name]. (Year, month day). Title of video [Video file]. Retrieved from http://url or https://url

Reference List Citation:

Rainbow, R. [Randy Rainbow]. (2017, May 15). The Russia connection [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2OuJYaz_oE

Sample APA Works Cited Page

Now that you have seen how to draft individual citations for an APA reference page, you need to see how to put them together. As is standard for all bibliographies, you alphabetize the sources. Using the sources above, we will create an APA reference page.

References

Chemaly, S. (2014, December 8). 50 actual facts about rape. Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/soraya-chemaly/50-facts-rape_b_2019338.html

Kovan, M. (2017). Capital punishment: a Buddhist critique. Journal of Buddhist Ethics, 21. Retrieved from http://blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/

Marquez, G.G. (2003). 100 years of solitude. (G. Rabassa, Trans.) New York, NY: Harper Collins. (Original work published 1970). Available from https://books.google.com/books?id=pgPWOaOctq8C&printsec=frontcover&dq=100+years+of+solitude&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiQxtSW8YTUAhXDXyYKHSlPBMsQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=100%20years%20of%20solitude&f=false.

Pratchett, T. & Gaiman, N. (2006). Good omens: The nice and accurate prophecies of Agnes Nutter, witch. New York, NY: Harpertorch. Available from https://books.google.com/books?id=7erEbfDOcgkC&printsec=frontcover&dq=pratchett+and+gaiman&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwim2KC76oTUAhVESyYKHVf8AwYQ6AEILjAB# v=onepage&q=pratchett%20and%20gaiman&f=false

Rainbow, R. [Randy Rainbow]. (2017, May 15). The Russia connection [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2OuJYaz_oE

Scherer, M. & Altman, A. (2017). Trump’s loyalty test. Time Magazine, 189 (20). Retrieved from http://time.com/4783929/president-trump-loyalty-test/?xid=homepage&pcd=hp-magmod

Stoker, B. (1897). Dracula: A mystery story. New York, N.Y.: W.R. Caldwell & Co. Available from https://books.google.com/books?id=k39vHp-5VeMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=dracula&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjK1tya54TUAhXMTSYKHQLkDM0Q6AEIMzAC#v=onepage&q=dracula&f=false,

Takahashi, J. (2017, May 19). Judge dismisses Ahmed Mohamed ‘Clock Boy’ suit against Irving ISD. Houston Chronicle. Retrieved from http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Judge-dismisses-Ahmed-Mohamed-Clock-Boy-suit-11159334.php

William Shakespeare. (2017, May 9). In Wikipedia. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare

Yardimci, V. H. & Yardimci, A.H. (2017). An unusual first manifestation of Hodgkin’s Lymphoma: Epitrochlear lymph node involvement- A case report and brief review of literature. J Investig Med High Impact Case Rep, 5(2). doi: 10.1177/2324709617706709

MLA Examples

Simple Book Format

Last Name, First Name. Title of Book. Publisher, Publication Date.

Stoker, Bram. Dracula: A Mystery Story. W.R. Caldwell & Co., 1897.

Book with Multiple Authors

If a book has multiple authors, then the format is similar to the single author book, except both authors are mentioned, in the order that they are listed on the book:

Last Name, First Name and First Name Last Name. Title. Publisher, Year of Publication.

Pratchett, Terry and Neil Gaiman. Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch. Harpertorch, 2006.

Translated or Edited Books with Authors

Translated or edited books can become a little challenging in your works cited. Usually, you want to focus on the author. However, there may be a reason that you want to focus on the translator or editor. In those instances, you will focus on the translator or editor first. Our example involves a translator:

Marquez, Gabriel Garcia. 100 Years of Solitude. Translated by Gregory Rabassa, 1970, Harper Collins, 2003.

However, to emphasize the translator, it would be:

Rabassa, Gregory, translator. 100 Years of Solitude. By Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1970, Harper Collins, 2003.

Basic MLA website citation format

Author Last, Author First. Title. Title of Website, Other contributors, Version or Edition, Volume, Number, Publisher, Publication Date, Pages or Paragraphs, URL or doi, Accessed Day Month Year.

Chemaly, Soraya. “50 Actual Facts About Rape.” Huffington Post, 8 December 2014, huffingtonpost.com/soraya-chemaly/50-facts-rape_b_2019338.html Accessed 19 May 2017.

Online Encyclopedias

In many online encyclopedias, there is no author information. Therefore, the article name takes the place of the author name. The generic format is:

Article name. (Date). In Encyclopedia name. Retrieved from URL

Works Cited citation:

William Shakespeare. Wikipedia, 9 May 2017, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare, Accessed 19 May 2017.

Article from an Online Periodical (Magazine or Non-Scholarly Journal)

Last, First. “Article Name.” Periodical Name, vol., no., year of publication, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

Scherer, Michael and Alex Altman, A. “Trump’s Loyalty Test.” Time Magazine, 189 (20), 29 May 2017. time.com/4783929/president-trump-loyalty-test/?xid=homepage&pcd=hp-magmod. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Article from an Online Scholarly Journal

The general format for an online-only scholarly journal is:

Last, First. “Article Name.” Journal Name, vol., no., year of publication, URL or doi. Accessed Day Month Year.

Yardimci, Veysi and Aytul Yardimci. “An Unusual First Manifestation of Hodgkin Lymphoma: Epitrochlear Lymph Node Involvement- A Case Report and Brief Review of Literature. Journal of Investigative Medicine: High Impact Case Reports, 5, 2, 2017.  10.1177/2324709617706709. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Scholarly Journal with No DOI

Last, First. “Article Name.” Journal Name, vol., no., year of publication, pp. xxx-xxx, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

 

Kovan, Martin. “Capital Punishment: A Buddhist Critique. Journal of Buddhist Ethics, 24. blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/files/2017/03/Kovan-Capital-Punishment-final-4.pdf. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Newspaper Articles:

Newspapers are another popular online resource. The basic citation for a newspaper article is simple:

Last, First. “Article Name.” Newspaper Name, Day Month Year, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

Takahashi, Julie. “Judge Dismisses Ahmed Mohamed ‘Clock Boy’ Suit Against Irving ISD.” Houston Chronicle, 19 May 2017, www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Judge-dismisses-Ahmed-Mohamed-Clock-Boy-suit-11159334.php. Accessed 19 May 2017.

General MLA Format for Films or Videos:

MLA has a general format for films or videos, which applies to those viewed online and those not viewed online, though videos not viewed online would not include the URL.

Late name, First name of the creator. “Title of the film or video.” Title of the website, role of contributors and their First name Last name, Version, Numbers, Publisher, Publication date, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

YouTube video in MLA format:

Late name, First name of the creator. “Title of the film or video.” YouTube, uploaded by username, date of upload, URL. Accessed Day Month Year.

In the below example, we look at the citation by YouTube personality Jack Septic Eye:


“We Won the Game: Player Unknown’s Battlegrounds #2 w/Robin.” YouTube, uploaded by Jack Septic Eye, 15 May 2017, www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIdx2NCzlyI. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Motion Pictures:

Motion pictures are relatively easy to cite. This is because, rather than citing them by their creator, you can choose to include them by title in your works cited page. Alternately, if you want to focus on the specific contribution of one of the creators of the work, you can list it by that person’s name.

The basic works citation format for a motion picture or video is:

Title of Movie. Directed by Director First and Last, Performances by First and Last Name(s), Studio, Year of Release.

To highlight a specific part of the film (director, actor, producer, etc.), begin with that person:

Last, First, role. Title of Movie. Studio, Year of Release.

For our example, we are using the film The Princess Bride. From the movie’s general information page on IMDB.com, we can find some basic information about the movie in the details section:

This information includes:
Country: USA

Release Date: October 9, 1987

Production Company: Act III Communications

From the Cast and Crew page, we can find additional information, including the director and producer, as well as the members of the cast:

Movie Title: The Princess Bride

Director Name: Rob Reiner

Cast: Cary Elwes, Robin Wright, Mandy Patinkin, Chris Sarandon

Scrolling down on the same page, we see:

The Princess Bride, Directed by Rob Reiner, Performances by Cary Elwes, Robin Wright, Mandy Patinkin, and Chris Sarandon, Act III Communications, 1987.

Sample MLA Works Cited Page

Now that you have seen how to draft individual citations for a MLA works cited page, you need to see how to put them together. As is standard for all bibliographies, you alphabetize the sources. Using the sources above, we will create a MLA reference page.

Works Cited

Chemaly, Soraya. “50 Actual Facts About Rape.” Huffington Post, 8 December 2014, huffingtonpost.com/soraya-chemaly/50-facts-rape_b_2019338.html Accessed 19 May 2017.

Kovan, Martin. “Capital Punishment: A Buddhist Critique. Journal of Buddhist Ethics, 24. blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/files/2017/03/Kovan-Capital-Punishment-final-4.pdf. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Marquez, Gabriel Garcia. 100 Years of Solitude. Translated by Gregory Rabassa, 1970, Harper Collins, 2003.

Pratchett, Terry and Neil Gaiman. Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch. Harpertorch, 2006.

The Princess Bride, Directed by Rob Reiner, Performances by Cary Elwes, Robin Wright, Mandy Patinkin, and Chris Sarandon, Act III Communications, 1987.

Scherer, Michael and Alex Altman, A. “Trump’s Loyalty Test.” Time Magazine, 189 (20), 29 May 2017. time.com/4783929/president-trump-loyalty-test/?xid=homepage&pcd=hp-magmod. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Stoker, Bram. Dracula: A Mystery Story. W.R. Caldwell & Co., 1897.

Takahashi, Julie. “Judge Dismisses Ahmed Mohamed ‘Clock Boy’ Suit Against Irving ISD.” Houston Chronicle, 19 May 2017, www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Judge-dismisses-Ahmed-Mohamed-Clock-Boy-suit-11159334.php. Accessed 19 May 2017.

“We Won the Game: Player Unknown’s Battlegrounds #2 w/Robin.” YouTube, uploaded by Jack Septic Eye, 15 May 2017, www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIdx2NCzlyI. Accessed 19 May 2017.

William Shakespeare. Wikipedia, 9 May 2017, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare, Accessed 19 May 2017.

Yardimci, Veysi and Aytul Yardimci. “An Unusual First Manifestation of Hodgkin Lymphoma: Epitrochlear Lymph Node Involvement- A Case Report and Brief Review of Literature. Journal of Investigative Medicine: High Impact Case Reports, 5, 2, 2017.  10.1177/2324709617706709. Accessed 19 May 2017.

Conclusion

Hopefully, this article has helped alleviate some of the concerns you may have had about creating a works cited page in MLA or APA format. We have found that if you use the information you have available when researching and create a citation for each form as you write. This allows you to simply put them together in an alphabetized list when you go to create your works cited page. If you have any other questions about completing a works cited page, we would be happy to answer them for you.

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