In academic writing, any time a writer brings in quotes and ideas from a source, they need to cite the source. MLA and APA styles both require in-text citations for all quoted, paraphrased, or summarized material from a source. A signal phrase can be used as part of the in-text citation, introducing source information usually with the author鈥檚 name and signaling to the reader that material is from that source. Parenthetical citations include author鈥檚 last name, if not already included in a signal phrase, and page numbers when available (many online don鈥檛 have page numbers to include in citations).
Sample citation with signal phrase:
In the introductory chapter to Let鈥檚 Talk: A Pocket Rhetoric, Andrea Lundsford emphasizes that 鈥渨riting is actually a way of participating in a larger conversation鈥 (10).
Sample citation with source information in parenthetical citation:
Many composition scholars emphasize that 鈥渨riting is actually a way of participating in a larger conversation鈥 (Lundsford 10).
Works Cited entry for the above citations:
Lundsford, Andrea. Let鈥檚 Talk: A Pocket Rhetoric. Norton, 2021.
Using Signal Phrases
The verbs you use reveal your own attitude toward the article, its author鈥檚 tone or its importance. Choosing a verb that describes the position of the author is best. For example, if an author is predicting a future event, say, 鈥淛ones predicts,鈥 not 鈥淛ones says.鈥 However, saying that an author 鈥渋nsists鈥 suggests that you do not agree with that author鈥檚 position. Below is a comprehensive list of verbs presented in a table.
acknowledges | considers | indicates | remarks |
adds | declares | insists | reports |
admits | denies | notes | responds |
agrees | disagrees | observes | says |
argues | discusses | offers | shows |
asserts | disputes | points out | states |
believes | emphasizes | predicts | suggests |
claims | endorses | proposes | thinks |
comments | explains | questions | wonders |
compares | illustrates | reason | writes |
concludes | imagines | refutes | |
confirms | implies | rejects |