amp-web-push-widget button.amp-subscribe { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; border-radius: 5px; border: 0; box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0; padding: 10px 15px; cursor: pointer; outline: none; font-size: 15px; font-weight: 500; background: #4A90E2; margin-top: 7px; color: white; box-shadow: 0 1px 1px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5); -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0); } .amp-logo amp-img{width:371px} .amp-menu input{display:none;}.amp-menu li.menu-item-has-children ul{display:none;}.amp-menu li{position:relative;display:block;}.amp-menu > li a{display:block;} /* Inline styles */ div.acss97d40{float:left;margin-right:1em;}div.acssf481d{max-width:508px;}h4.acss138d7{clear:both;}span.acss6eee8{font-weight:normal;}p.acss0786f{text-align:left;}p.acss2f015{text-align:center;}div.acss94f2b{max-width:1092px;}li.acssbf878{list-style-type:none;}a.acssedec7{font-size:13.3px;font-weight:normal;} .icon-widgets:before {content: "\e1bd";}.icon-search:before {content: "\e8b6";}.icon-shopping-cart:after {content: "\e8cc";}
Jerz > Writing > Academic
[ Argument | Title | Thesis | Blueprint | Pro/Con | Quoting | MLA Format ]
(View a Google Doc template for an MLA Style paper.)
0.1) If your instructor has asked you to submit a paper in MLA style, that means you’ll be expected to follow certain conventions that will affect your grade. This document will show you how to format your essay in MLA style.
0.2) If you are still getting started on your essay, you might instead see my handouts on writing a short research paper, coming up with a good thesis statement, and using quotations in the body of your paper.
For the most complete information, check your campus library or writing center for the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, 8th ed.
Your word processor comes with default settings (margin, line height, paragraph spacing, and typeface) that will likely need adjustment. For MLA style, you need:
| |
| (Jump directly to instructions for adjusting MS-Word settings in Windows or Mac; or, skip ahead to 2) Page Header.) | |
1.1 Adjusting Document Setting in Google Docs
My copy of Google Docs defaults to
Changing Google Docs to MLA Style
Or you can see my Google Docs template for an MLA style paper
My copy of Microsoft Word for Windows defaults to
Changing to MLA Style (Windows)
Changing to MLA style (Mac)
In the top right of every page, use your word processor’s “Page Header” function add an automatic page number and your surname.
2.1 Adding the Page Header in MS-Word (Windows)
2.2 Adding the Page Header in MS-Word (Mac)
In the upper left corner, type your name, your instructor’s name, the course number and section, and today’s date. Centered on the next line, type an informative title that actually informs the reader of your main point (not just “English Paper” or “A Comparison between Hamlet and Macbeth”).
This handout presumes you already know why you should cite your sources (to establish your authority, to introduce persuasive evidence, to avoid plagiarism, etc.).
To fully cite a source requires two stages. The first happens in the body of your paper (the “in-text citation”) and the second happens on a separate page at the end of your paper (see “Works Cited List,” below.)
4.1 Citing a Block Quote (more than three lines)
4.2 Citing an Inline Quotation
When the passage you want to quote is less than three lines long, use inline style. Here we have two brief passages, taken from the same page of the same source, so we can handle both with a single parenthetical citation.
4.3 Citing a Paraphrase
Let’s imagine we want to reference Wordsworth-Fuller’s general idea about citation as a way to establish credibility, but we don’t need to include any of the technical details. We can save space, and make it much easier on our reader, if we paraphrase:
Tips for avoiding common errors in MLA citations.
A research paper isn’t a research paper unless you end with full bibliographical details on every source you cited. This part can be tedious and tricky; leave yourself plenty of time to do it.
How to format the “Works Cited” list of an MLA style paper.
Exactly what goes into each item in your bibliography depends on what kind of item it is. The general format is as follows:
Author. Title of Source. Container, contributors, version, volume and issue, publisher, date, location.
Exactly how that basic format gets turned into a Works Cited entry depends on the source.
Here’s the basic format for any book:
Basic Format for Any Academic Article
Author. “Title of Article in Quotation Marks.” Title of Journal in Italics, volume #, issue #, YEAR, pp. [pages of article]. Italicized Name of Database.
Let’s break that example down.
The author Margaret Kantz wrote the article “Helping Students Use Textual Sources Persuasively.” That article doesn’t exist on its own floating in space; it was published by a journal called College English, in the 52nd year of publication, in the first issue of its 52nd volume, in the year 1990, the article started on page 74 and ran through page 91. The student found this article while searching the database Academic Search Elite.
Every academic article has a specific title, and is published in a journal with a different title. (Online citation generators often get this wrong, and will often repeat the same title twice.)
If College English were a TV series, then “volume” would be which season, and the title of the article would be the episode.
The title of the database (in the example, “Academic Search Elite“) is like the name of the streaming service (Netflix, or Paramount+).
Here’s a short video that explains why EBSCOhost is not specific enough to put in the slot where MLA style asks for the database, and how to find what you should put in that slot instead.
| EBSCOhost is not specific enough. It’s not the name of a database; it’s a tool researchers use to access databases, but different schools can access different databases through different EBSCOhost subscription plans | |
| If you tell me that I can find your favorite TV show “on a MacBook,” that’s too vague. Just because I own a MacBook doesn’t automatically grant me access to all the streaming services you access on your MacBook. In a similar way, telling me you found a source on “EBSCOhost” is too vague. | |
| “Academic Search Elite” or “SPORTDiscus with Full Text” are titles of specific databases. | |
| This is like telling me your favorite TV show is on Netflix or Disney+. It tells me the specific name of the database I need to access in order to find the article you found. | |
In the above example, reporter Camila Domonoske filed a news story called “Students Have ‘Dismaying’ Inability To Tell Fake News From Real, Study Finds,” that aired on a news program called The Two-Way, which is published by National Public Radio, and the story aired Nov 23, 2016.
In MLS Style, the full URL is optional. Really long URLs with long strings of numbers in them are often generated for specific users, so someone else who visits that same URL will often get an error message.
You might shorten the URL to “npr.org,” because it would be a simple matter to use a search engine to find the actual story.
What if your source doesn’t fit any of my examples?
You might be trying to cite something that doesn’t fit the above pattern, like a social media post, a video game, a work of art, an email from a relative, a billboard, or something else. It’s just not practical for me to try to include an example of every single thing it’s possible to cite.
The MLA citation format is designed to be flexible, so that it works for forms of media that haven’t been invented yet.
See Purdue OWL’s handouts for how to create a bibliography entry for a book, an article in a periodical (such as a journal or newspaper), or an electronic source (such as an email, web page or a YouTube clip). See also this list of other common sources (such as a personal interview or a movie).
Sort the entries alphabetically by the author‘s last name.
29 May 2011 — new document posted, replacing outdated handout written in 1999.
06 Jun 2011 — expanded section on organizing the Works Cited list, since several readers asked for clarification.
07 Jun 2011 — reorganized for emphasis
19 Apr 2012 — added numbers to more subheads
24 Mar 2014 — added details on Works Cited paragraph formatting.
02 Oct 2016 — updated with MLA 8th Edition details.
30 Nov 2016 — added annotated Works Cited sample image.
07 Sep 2020 — updated section 5.1
24 Feb 2025 — streamlined opening; added Google Docs instructions and link to video explaining my advice about EBSCOhost
Related Writing Links |
|
View Comments
I wish to request for the format for writing long essay
Hello, thanks for your comment. MLA Style is the same for short and long papers, so you have found the right page. Is your question about the purpose, method, strategy of writing?
I agree with Dennis, the one above me I mean, but i think he mean that he means you sound over protectING, if you dont want to see harsh things online dont go onlnie. there are worse things like child trafficcing, and you choose to yell at someone for just saying DUHHH everyone knows how to use words... PATHETIC should be you named not parent. GROW up stupid idot
Let me say the following sentence on behalf of everyone in this site: beard_nelson is a mentally retarded jerk.
If we are going to insult others, can we please do it with correct grammar and spelling? =)
Just as I didn't see myself as being harsh, I don't see "Parent" as yelling. Life is too short for me to spend it getting mad at dots on a screen.
Where's the love?
I think that you need to write baout how to use a block quote, this whole thing ws useless and stupid, didn't help me at all, as for PARENT shut up you just sound over protected and ignorant.
For the format of a block quote, see item #4, "Citing a Block Quote." For more detail about how and why to use block quotes, see http://jerz.setonhill.edu/writing/academic1/quotations-integrating-them-in-mla-style-papers/
I feel the response to the question dated 4.10.12 was inappropriate. Don't discourage a child with your words. The statement "I'm not sure how I can make it any clearer" was not needed. I understand you go very basic with yor steps but lets be nice.
Thanks for the feedback. I did not intend that to sound harsh. If someone asks me what I mean by this or that detail, then I can improve that area. If I was frustrated, it was because the question didn't help me see where I could be clearer.
I have to do an essay and make it in MLA Format by Friday. I was wondering how you do it on word......
You've found the right page... I'm not sure how I can make it any clearer. Start with #1, above.
At the beginning of a new paragraph, I do the regular indent. But, if the paragraph begins with a quotation mark, do I need to make an adjustment to the indention to make the first letter of the word line up with the previous paragraphs?
No, these is no need to adjust the margin like that.
This is my new fav website its saving my life
My daughter's teacher is requiring an MLA title page, but I cannot find 2 formats that are alike. I thought title pages were obsolete, anyway. Also, her teacher is requiring both a works cited page and a bibliography. I have never heard of requiring both and cannot find anything online to confirm this as a correct format. Is this new? Which would come first? Thanks!
I suggest that the best way to proceed would be for your daughter to ask her teacher for clarification.
It may be that your teacher didn't explain it well and needs to try again, or maybe the teacher did explain it and your daughter wasn't paying attention, or maybe your teacher explained perfectly well but your daughter was out of the room for some perfectly legitimate reason.
Current MLA style does not require a cover page, and the Works Cited is the standard requirement, though it is also possible that a teacher may want a list of works consulted (whether they did or didn't actually get cited in the paper), and likewise as part of the drafting process I often ask my students to submit an annotated bibliography, but in such a case I give the students a separate handout explaining that part of the assignment.
Your daughter's teacher may have a very good reason for wanting certain components that vary from the official MLA style, but I won't be marking the assignment, so whatever I say won't be of much help.
Just an update: I went with my daughter for a conference with the teacher. She says colleges are requiring both Works Cited and a formal Bibliography of all works reviewed - not annotated, just exactly like the Works Cited page, but all inclusive. It's been a long time since I earned my English degree and a few years since I taught MLA formatting in a high school setting, but I've never heard of such a thing. The style always changes, so I'll just give her that one. However, every web site reference says that cover pages are obsolete. I just told my daughter that the bottom line is to give the teacher what she wants to get the A, then you can do what the MLA guide suggests in the future. Thanks for your help - great site!
Thanks for the update.
This is a life saver! I'm just returning to college after graduating high school 13 years ago and MLA is how I did every paper back then. I needed a major refresher and this was perfect! Thank you!
i think u just saved me from getting a zero on the report im doing...thank you so much.