Annotated Bibliography

profileihp0006
Common_Types_MLA_Citations.pdf

Common Types of MLA Citations

1. Electronic source. Website page. More than two authors.

→ First listed author (last name, first name), et al. Article title (in quotation marks). Source (in italics),

date published (if available). URL. Date accessed by you.

Silver, Laura, et al. “Mobile Divides in Emerging Economies.” Pew Research Center, 19 Nov. 2019.

https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2019/11/20/mobile-divides-in-emerging-economies/. Accessed

23 January 2020.

2. Electronic source. Website page. No author.

→ Source of information. Title of page or article (in quotation marks). Source of information (in italics),

date published (if available). URL. Date accessed by you.

United States Census Bureau. “Young Adults and Higher Education.” United States Census Bureau, 20

August 2019. https://www.census.gov/library/visualizations/interactive/young-adults-higher-

education.html. Accessed 23 January 2020.

3. Book. Single author.

→ Author (last name, first name). Book title in italics. Publisher, year.

Gibson, William. Neuromancer. Penguin Books, 1984.

4. Book. Two authors.

→ First listed author (last name first, first name) and second author (first name and last name). Book

title in italics. Publisher, year.

Susskind, Leonard and Art Friedman. Quantum Mechanics: The Theoretical Minimum. Basic Books,

2014.