Used to close out a complete sentence.
A period.
How works cited pages are organized.
Alphabetical order.
Proper MLA heading
Name
Professor Name
Class
Due date
The 3 points of the rhetorical triangle.
Pathos, logos, and ethos.
Used to indicate dialogue.
Quotation marks.
Title of references page according to MLA style.
Works Cited.
Proper header on every page.
4 things that a headline must include.
Who, what, when, where.
The 3 main parts of a sentence.
Subject, verb, and direct object.
Proper way of incorporating a quote into your own writing.
Merging it with your own words.
4 components that make up an introduction (like your abstracts).
Intro, context, thesis, and conclusion.
Fiction, journalism, and essays.
Punctuation that is too weak to connect 2 full ideas.
A quote that is 4 or more lines.
A block quote.
How many sources you need for the final draft.
5 sources.
Title of the movie we watched about Watergate.
All the President's Men.
All the permutations of first-person.
I, me, my, we, us, our.
How to cite 3 or more authors in-text.
(Last name, et. al).
3 adjectives that describe a successful thesis.
Clear, specific, and arguable.
The library link you need to copy to maintain access to your sources.