Even though the text read Japanese, this was the only video I found useful after hours of searching. You are damn good man I really got all my doubts cleared. A big thanks to you!!!
Thankyou so much ! The video was very very helpful. I was searching thousands of videos..and was frustrated But your video was very helpful and to the point! Thankyou Once again!
very very good and most simplified explanation, btw how come you have used Chinese version applets, only this is the very small limitation of this video...... Thanks and well done
Thank U so much. I have a question though: Whenever I insert a citation, it always appears to be in default format of (Author, Year), e.g (Williams, 1945). However, in my text I sometimes have to paraphrase the sources, e.g "Williams (1945) said that..." or "According to Williams (1945), ...", so I need to cite sources in format of Author (Year) instead of the default format". Is there an automatic Word feature to do that and how? Thank you sir a lot.
I discuss how to do this at time 7:55 or so in the video. I assume your computer is not in Japanese, so just in case, I'll explain it here: 1. insert the citation as usual 2. right click on it and select something like "edit reference" Then, there will be a window where you can select what NOT to show. 3. Click on author and title and then OK, and the author's name will disappear from the citation.
If I want to cite some information from a paper that has already been cited which paper do I cite? The one that contains the cited information or the original one from which this information came from?
So, there is the source you have, and then the original. Like Nathalie Adina said, you can explain the original source and then cite the one you have, putting "cited in" or "as cited in" in front of the citation, like: (cited in Smith, 2017). BUT... If possible, try to get the original source itself and cite directly from that. I only use the "cited in" method when (1) the original is in a language I don't read, or (2) I can't get it because it's old and out of print. One other case is (3) if I think that the fact that the original is cited in connection with my topic is a great idea of the more recent author. Imagine the source you have cites The Great Gatsby or something. You want to quote that in your argument too, but the fact that the more recent author quoted Gatsby is kind of clever, so it would be plagiarizing to just use the Gatsby quote as if you thought of connecting that to your topic yourself.
You obviously care enough to do a tutorial on this topic so why frustrate most of your viewers by not changing the language to English or at least making sure to explain each point of change fully? The way you have gone about some of the steps for example when editing the text after placing in text citation is very confusing. You are like , I click here and there....... Where?? Elaborate please. Thanks.
Even though the text read Japanese, this was the only video I found useful after hours of searching. You are damn good man I really got all my doubts cleared. A big thanks to you!!!
Thankyou so much ! The video was very very helpful. I was searching thousands of videos..and was frustrated But your video was very helpful and to the point! Thankyou Once again!
Thank you so much, the video was very easy to understand and helped me in completing my term paper.
Thanks for making this tutorial, it really helped.
its helped better if you use english language on your word sir
ok thanks we are very impressed!!! congrads you know Japanese!! , enough showing off and its so obvious and silly,
Thank you! This is so useful
Thank you sir.. very informative
It's very informative, great job sir👍
Very well organised. Thank You.
Thank you.
How hard is to change the language of MS Word
Not hard at all. You could try changing it to Japanese, following the video, and then changing it back.
Thank you very much
very very good and most simplified explanation, btw how come you have used Chinese version applets, only this is the very small limitation of this video...... Thanks and well done
THANK U SO MUCH
in the right time thank you.
thanks you for the video, helpful.
Thank you ☺️
thanks a lot sir...
How do I know the citation if the website I was searching in doesn't have a citation but only information?
Thank you sir !
Why is Word in your video not in English. Very distracting and not as helpful.
i have a Question please wen i add the citation in my document it looks like a plain text how can i fix this problem!!
Nice video. Thanks for uploading. However, it’s a bit distracting because your screen is not In English. Thanks
Can you change the title bar language into english?
Thank U so much. I have a question though: Whenever I insert a citation, it always appears to be in default format of (Author, Year), e.g (Williams, 1945). However, in my text I sometimes have to paraphrase the sources, e.g "Williams (1945) said that..." or "According to Williams (1945), ...", so I need to cite sources in format of Author (Year) instead of the default format". Is there an automatic Word feature to do that and how? Thank you sir a lot.
I discuss how to do this at time 7:55 or so in the video. I assume your computer is not in Japanese, so just in case, I'll explain it here:
1. insert the citation as usual
2. right click on it and select something like "edit reference"
Then, there will be a window where you can select what NOT to show.
3. Click on author and title and then OK, and the author's name will disappear from the citation.
I wish it is in written English, I still like it though. Thank you!
How do you shorten an author though? like American Psychological Association, I want this shortened to APA in word
Thank you!
If I want to cite some information from a paper that has already been cited which paper do I cite? The one that contains the cited information or the original one from which this information came from?
Vesica feL2ea You say, According to Perez as cited by Vesica.
So, there is the source you have, and then the original. Like Nathalie Adina said, you can explain the original source and then cite the one you have, putting "cited in" or "as cited in" in front of the citation, like: (cited in Smith, 2017).
BUT... If possible, try to get the original source itself and cite directly from that. I only use the "cited in" method when (1) the original is in a language I don't read, or (2) I can't get it because it's old and out of print.
One other case is (3) if I think that the fact that the original is cited in connection with my topic is a great idea of the more recent author. Imagine the source you have cites The Great Gatsby or something. You want to quote that in your argument too, but the fact that the more recent author quoted Gatsby is kind of clever, so it would be plagiarizing to just use the Gatsby quote as if you thought of connecting that to your topic yourself.
helpful
@Steve Kirk please post a detail video aboutmendeley or zotero
+azhar chachar Good idea. I'll do that.
Thanks for your great presentation.
you are great
Thanks
Thanx❤️
How knows chinese language? Is it international? We understood little more but not at all.
how to add a number instead the author's citation?
Bert0ld0 Change the style into IEE
only you have the answer for time 5:40 in the whole of internet
why not using the English version!!
WHY? The hell would you not change the language to English if your speaking English???🥴🥴🥴
You obviously care enough to do a tutorial on this topic so why frustrate most of your viewers by not changing the language to English or at least making sure to explain each point of change fully? The way you have gone about some of the steps for example when editing the text after placing in text citation is very confusing. You are like , I click here and there....... Where?? Elaborate please. Thanks.
Your video is useful but would have been more useful without those chinese characters. I don't why you don't have english characters in your computer?
love from Pakistan , great work :) :) :)
Roses are red violets are blue the title is english why arent you ?
3:20...
You computer speaks Japanese
if you are teaching in english, put your interface in english
ロボト氏、ありがとうございました。
why your pc have chines language?
That is Japanese.
poor video sorry
Thank you so much
thanks