How to Cite a Wikipedia Article in MLA Format
Start by crediting Wikipedia Contributors., Follow this with the name of the article in quotation marks., Credit Wikipedia in italics., Credit Wikipedia with no italics., Finish with the date and the word "Web.", Include URLS in some cases., Use the...
Step-by-Step Guide
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Step 1: Start by crediting Wikipedia Contributors.
Since Wikipedia articles are written by many volunteers, there isn't a single author you can cite.
However, you can credit the many volunteers who wrote the article.If you prefer, you can leave this citation off, and simply begin with the name of the article. -
Step 2: Follow this with the name of the article in quotation marks.
The title of the article is the subject of the article.
For instance, if you are citing an article about blueberries, the title of the article would be "Blueberry." You should be able to easily see the title of your article at the top of your Wikipedia page.Put a period after the title, and enclose the title and period together in quotation marks.
Your citation so far should read:
Wikipedia Contributors. "Blueberry."
The full name of Wikipedia is Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia.
Italicize this and put it after the article title, followed by a period.
Now your citation goes:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia., Wikipedia is both the website and the publisher of your article, so you have to list it twice.
This time, don't italicize Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Follow this second listing with a comma rather than a period.
Now you have:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, , List the date of the page's last revision.
To find this, click on the tab to the right of the title that says "View history." The top date listed is the date of the last revision.List the first the day of the month, then the month abbreviated (ex.
Oct, Dec, Sept), followed by a period.
After this write the word "Web" and a period.
Next, list the date again, followed by a period.
Example: 11 Jan.
2017.
Web. 11 Jan.
2017.
Now your citation reads:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 11 Jan.
2017.
Web. 11 Jan.
2017. , MLA used to require URLs, but no longer does.
However, with a generic subject such as blueberries, you might choose to include a URL at the end of your citation.
In this case, cite it within "<" and ">"For instance, you might write:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 11 Jan.
2017.
Web. 11 Jan.
2017.< https: , Rather than writing all this out, use Wikipedia's tool for generating page citations.
Go to the article you are citing, and locate the "Tools" menu to the left of the article.
Click "Cite this page." Scroll down until you see the citation in MLA format.
You can copy this into your Works Cited.
You can also search the name of your article in Wikipedia's Cite This Page tool: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:
CiteThisPage&page=Blueberry&id=744027753 , At the end of a sentence in which you quote, paraphrase, or otherwise use information from a Wikipedia article, you must cite the article.
Place parentheses before the period that ends the sentence, but after quotation marks if they are used., If you are citing Wikipedia contributors, put that within your parentheses.
If you have opted to forgo the authors and instead have started your Works Cited citation with the title of the article, put that in the parentheses.
For instance, you might write:
Blueberries are a great source of nutrients (Wikipedia Contributors).
Alternatively, you might write:
Blueberries are a great source of nutrients (Blueberry). , If you are citing more than one Wikipedia article, you can include both the contributors and the title within your parentheses.
You could write:
Blueberries are a great source of nutrients (Wikipedia contributors, Blueberry). -
Step 3: Credit Wikipedia in italics.
-
Step 4: Credit Wikipedia with no italics.
-
Step 5: Finish with the date and the word "Web."
-
Step 6: Include URLS in some cases.
-
Step 7: Use the Wikipedia Citation Generator.
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Step 8: Position your parentheses.
-
Step 9: Put the start of your citation within the parentheses.
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Step 10: Cite multiple Wikipedia articles.
Detailed Guide
Since Wikipedia articles are written by many volunteers, there isn't a single author you can cite.
However, you can credit the many volunteers who wrote the article.If you prefer, you can leave this citation off, and simply begin with the name of the article.
The title of the article is the subject of the article.
For instance, if you are citing an article about blueberries, the title of the article would be "Blueberry." You should be able to easily see the title of your article at the top of your Wikipedia page.Put a period after the title, and enclose the title and period together in quotation marks.
Your citation so far should read:
Wikipedia Contributors. "Blueberry."
The full name of Wikipedia is Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia.
Italicize this and put it after the article title, followed by a period.
Now your citation goes:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia., Wikipedia is both the website and the publisher of your article, so you have to list it twice.
This time, don't italicize Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Follow this second listing with a comma rather than a period.
Now you have:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, , List the date of the page's last revision.
To find this, click on the tab to the right of the title that says "View history." The top date listed is the date of the last revision.List the first the day of the month, then the month abbreviated (ex.
Oct, Dec, Sept), followed by a period.
After this write the word "Web" and a period.
Next, list the date again, followed by a period.
Example: 11 Jan.
2017.
Web. 11 Jan.
2017.
Now your citation reads:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 11 Jan.
2017.
Web. 11 Jan.
2017. , MLA used to require URLs, but no longer does.
However, with a generic subject such as blueberries, you might choose to include a URL at the end of your citation.
In this case, cite it within "<" and ">"For instance, you might write:
Wikipedia contributors. "Blueberry." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 11 Jan.
2017.
Web. 11 Jan.
2017.< https: , Rather than writing all this out, use Wikipedia's tool for generating page citations.
Go to the article you are citing, and locate the "Tools" menu to the left of the article.
Click "Cite this page." Scroll down until you see the citation in MLA format.
You can copy this into your Works Cited.
You can also search the name of your article in Wikipedia's Cite This Page tool: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:
CiteThisPage&page=Blueberry&id=744027753 , At the end of a sentence in which you quote, paraphrase, or otherwise use information from a Wikipedia article, you must cite the article.
Place parentheses before the period that ends the sentence, but after quotation marks if they are used., If you are citing Wikipedia contributors, put that within your parentheses.
If you have opted to forgo the authors and instead have started your Works Cited citation with the title of the article, put that in the parentheses.
For instance, you might write:
Blueberries are a great source of nutrients (Wikipedia Contributors).
Alternatively, you might write:
Blueberries are a great source of nutrients (Blueberry). , If you are citing more than one Wikipedia article, you can include both the contributors and the title within your parentheses.
You could write:
Blueberries are a great source of nutrients (Wikipedia contributors, Blueberry).
About the Author
Mark Williams
Dedicated to helping readers learn new skills in creative arts and beyond.
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