MLA Citation Guide

How to Use This Guide

Welcome to the MLA Citation Guide! Use tabs above for more information on the following topics:

Picture of Top of Books on Shelf▪ About MLA Style: Overview of this style
▪ Paper Format: General layout and examples
▪ Books/eBooks: Layout and examples for books and ebooks
▪ Articles: Layout and examples for journal, magazine, and newspaper articles in print, online, and databases
▪ Websites: Layout and examples website citations
▪ More: Layout and examples of a movie, interview, and photo
▪ Annotated Bibliography: Explanation, layout, and examples
▪ Ask Us: Contact for more help

About Style and Use

Created by the Modern Language Association, MLA is a citation format used for research papers in many college classes, including English classes. Your instructor will tell you if MLA format is required.


NOTE: Instructors may ask for citations or elements that differ from the formal MLA layout covered in this guide. You should always follow your instructor's requirements if they differ from requirements in this guide.

MLA Format


Citation Management Tools

Citation management tools can help you create citations in various formats. Click on the link below for more information about the citation management tool available through the library.

Citation Formats

What Are Citation Formats?

Citation formats are rules and guidelines that make writing styles uniform within a specific work or publication. They cover the following:

  • Layout of paper. Includes margins, spaces between lines, font size, etc.
  • Full documentation of source used. Added to end-of-paper list named Works Cited for MLA and References for APA.
  • In-Text documentation of sources. Small part of full documentation that goes near used information.

There are many citation formats. Some of the more commonly used ones are MLA format, APA format and Chicago format.


Why Cite Sources?

There are several reasons why you would want to cite your sources:

  • Lend authority and credibility to your work
  • Allow readers (including your instructor) to cross‐reference sources easily
  • Provide consistent format
  • Acknowledge academic debts and avoid plagiarism

What Is Plagiarism?

Plagiarism is giving the impression that you wrote or thought something that you borrowed from someone else.

  • Even accidental plagiarism can lead to failing your class or being expelled.
  • Plagiarism in your professional career can result in being sued, fired, and publicly embarrassed.

How Can You Avoid Plagiarism? Cite your sources using a citation format.


What Must Be Cited?

  • Directly Quoted Information – Info straight from a source, which goes in quotation marks
  • Paraphrased Information – Ideas from source but phrasing changed to your words
  • Summarized Information – Ideas from large passage of source condensed using your words
  • Factual Information – Factual information that is NOT common knowledge

Material is probably common knowledge if:

  • Same info is undocumented in at least five other sources
  • Your readers probably already know the info
  • Facts found in many places and likely known by a lot of people

From: The Online Writing Lab. Purdue University


Frequently Used Formats

  • MLA Format – Created by the Modern Language Association. Used for research papers in many college and academic classes, including English classes.
  • APA Format – Created by the American Psychological Association.
  • Chicago Format – Published by the University of Chicago Press in The Chicago Manual of Style.
  • AMA Format – Made by the American Medical Association for writing medical research.

How do you know which format to use? Your instructor will let you know the required format for your class and assignments.