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Incorporating quotes . There are two ways to incorporate quotes: Using a full quote Using an embedded or integrated quote. Using a Full Quote. When you incorporate a full quote, you should introduce the quote and then follow it with a comma and a full sentence of quoted material:
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Incorporating quotes • There are two ways to incorporate quotes: • Using a full quote • Using an embedded or integrated quote
Using a Full Quote • When you incorporate a full quote, you should introduce the quote and then follow it with a comma and a full sentence of quoted material: Example: In The Last Stand, Kelly Bettiga, a third generation PL employee, said of the pre-takeover Palco, “Most people who worked timber couldn’t count on much more than the sun coming up the next morning… Here [in Scotia] you could count on everything.”
Using an Embedded Quote • When you incorporate an embedded or integrated quote, you should introduce the quote and continue (without a comma) that same sentence with a partial sentence of quoted material woven in (and you needn’t start with a capital letter): Example: Stephen Most describes how the “Salmon War was an act within a larger drama” (121).