Apa Direct Quotations PDF
Apa Direct Quotations PDF
Example: In the same respect, Brunner (2008) describes how “this perfected human contact can be attained
only if a mutual, strong relationship between the organization and its constituencies exists” (p. 74).
When directly quoting from a source, the author’s last name, the year of publication, and the page num-
ber where the quote was found needs to be present in the citation. This can be done in one of two ways.
The first example shows the full citation at the end of the direct quote. The second example uses the au-
thor’s name and date within the sentence and notes the page number after the direct quote.
Example 1: “This perfected human contact can be attained only if a mutual, strong relationship between the
Example 2: Brunner (2008) states that, “this perfected human contact can be attained only if a mutual, strong
relationship between the organization and its constituencies exists” (p. 74).
In APA format, block quotations are used when directly quoting forty or more words. Indent a block quotation
so it is free-standing from the rest of paper’s text and omit quotation marks.
The term relationship is not uniformly defined in the literature or by the participants. From the
responses gathered in these in-depth interviews, many definitions for relationship exist and
respondents were not always comfortable suggesting a definition for the term. For example,
some participants avoided the question all together and instead described how a relationship
Example: Brunner (1998) noted that “the term relationship is not uniformly defined…” (p. 77).
Ellipses may also be used in the middle of a quote to replace any unused material in between.
Example: Brunner (1998) noted that “the term relationship is not uniformly defined…and respondents were
not always comfortable suggesting a definition for the term” (p. 77).
When paraphrasing or summarizing an idea from a work, credit must still be given to the source where
the idea was obtained. When paraphrasing, the author and year are required in the citation, but APA
guidelines encourage the notation of a page number as well.
Example: Brunner discusses the importance in the relationships between human beings that work for an or-
ganization and the outside stockholders of the same company (Brunner, 2008, p. 74).
When you are quoting or paraphrasing a passage spoken or written by one scholar or writer that is referred to
within the work of another scholar or writer (an indirect source), include the original author’s name in the text
and cite the author of the indirect source within the parenthetical reference using “as cited in”. By crediting
both the original author and the author of the indirect source, the reader can easily locate the quoted passage
and you protect yourself in case the original author was misquoted. While the original source should always be
used when available, quoting or paraphrasing the indirect source is acceptable. Here is an example in which
the original author of the quotation is Rothbart, and Braungart-Rieker, Hill-Soderlund, and Karrass are the au-
thors of the indirect source:
Rothbart explains that “although there are numerous conceptualizations, temperament is generally thought of
as early appearing individual differences in emotional, motor, and attentional reactivity as well as the regula-
tion of this reactivity” (as cited in Braungart-Rieker, Hill-Soderlund, & Karrass, 2010, p. 792).
Reference
Braungart-Rieker, J. M., Hill-Soderlund, A. L., & Karass. J. (2010). Fear and anger reactivity
*Note: the phrase “as cited in” is used to give credit to the indirect source in which the information appears.
**Note: Only the indirect source citation appears in the References section. (Last modified 5/28/2013)