How do you cite a survey in MLA?
When you cite a survey or questionnaire in your paper, put down the name of the person conducting the survey with the last name first, the first name last, followed by the name of the survey in quotation marks.
Is SurveyMonkey trademarked?
Trademarks. SurveyMonkey’s trademarks (such as SurveyMonkey, People Powered Data™, and any logo versions of those marks) are owned by SurveyMonkey Inc. and its affiliates in the United States and other countries.
How do you cite an online game in APA?
Here is the basic format for a reference list entry of a video game in APA style 6th edition: Rightsholder of video game. (Year of publication). Title of the video game (Version) [Video game].
How do you cite a card game?
Designer Last Name, Designer First Name. Title of Game: Subtitle. Edition. Publication Location: Publisher, Year.
Do I italicize video games?
Answered By: Stephanie DeLeon You would italicize the title of the video game, as it’s the name of a standalone, self-contained work — a work that is complete in and of itself, like a book or movie or painting. You also want to make sure you note the version of the game and which platform it was played on.
How do you cite a Google Map screenshot?
The required elements for referencing from Google Maps is: Map publisher (origin), Year of publication. Created map title, Scale.
How do you cite a Youtube screenshot Chicago?
For film or tv screenshots, cite the entire document the first time, but also give fig. #s to each screenshot. Thereafter, no need to cite it again, as long as your references to it are clear (by its title or creator) or you use the fig. # again each time you mention it.
How do you cite a figure in Chicago style?
1. First Name Last Name of creator, Title of Work (Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication), page number, figure number.
Can you reference yourself in an essay?
If you have made a point or conducted research in one paper that you would like to build on in a later paper, you must cite yourself, just as you would cite the work of others. For another perspective on self-citation, see Matt’s blog post, “The Northwest Passage, or Why You Should Cite Yourself Only Sparingly.”