plagiarism - using someone else's work as your own, paraphrasing - take ideas and information and write them in your own words, direct quotation - a word-for-word extract from a source, used to reproduce the original author's exact words These must always be placed inside quotation marks, referencing - acknowledge the source of your information, reference list = end-of text referencing - a full and accurate list of all sources referenced within your text., in-text citation - a brief acknowledgement within your text that identifies the source of information, including the author's last name and publication year, to avoid plagiarism and give credit to the original author, AP in-text referencing - Brophy (2010) argues that..., IP in-text referencing - ..... (Brophy 2010)., ampersand - &, rounded brackets - (...), italics - a font style where letters slant to the right, single quotation marks - '.........', et al. - = and others. Used in academic citations when referring to a source with multiple authors.1, n.d. - when the publication date is unknown, use this abbreviation (= ‘no date’), pointed brackets - <.....>, comma - ,, full stop/period - ., reporting verb - a word which is used to talk about other people's work. For example - shows, illustrates, states, argues, space - a blank area that separates words, characters etc., initial - the first letter of a name/word,
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