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citerings

Citerings is the practice and result of acknowledging the sources that inform a scholarly or formal text. It encompasses both the act of citing—quoting or paraphrasing the ideas of others—and the formal record of those sources in a bibliography or reference list. Citerings help attribute intellectual debts, enable readers to verify claims, and situate new work within the broader scholarly conversation.

Citerings appear in several forms. In-text citings provide brief information about a source within the body

Common citation styles include APA, MLA, Chicago, and Vancouver. Each style prescribes rules for the order of

In practice, citerings rely on consistent, accurate data: author names, publication years, titles, publishers, and identifiers.

of
the
text,
using
parenthetical
or
narrative
integration.
A
separate
bibliography,
works
cited,
or
reference
section
at
the
end
of
a
document
collects
full
bibliographic
details
for
all
cited
works.
The
exact
format
and
punctuation
of
citerings
depend
on
the
chosen
citation
style
and
the
discipline.
elements
(such
as
author,
title,
date),
capitalization,
punctuation,
and
how
to
handle
different
source
types
(books,
journal
articles,
websites).
Many
styles
also
specify
how
to
handle
direct
quotes,
paraphrasing,
multiple
authors,
edition
information,
and
identifiers
like
DOIs
or
URLs.
Digital
tools,
such
as
reference
managers
and
bibliographic
databases,
assist
authors
in
collecting,
organizing,
and
formatting
citations.
Ethical
citerings
require
faithful
representation
of
sources,
avoidance
of
plagiarism,
and
careful
verification
of
details
to
maintain
credibility
and
support
scholarly
dialogue.