#  Frequently Asked Questions about Citing Sources in MLA Format 

 



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###    How do you cite social media posts?  expand\_more  

 

You should cite a post on X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, or other social media using the same format of core elements that you use for other sources. In this case, the “author” is the author of the post, with their handle (if it is different from their name) in parentheses. The title is the first part of the post (if text) or a description of the image (if the post is an image). The container is the platform (X, Instagram, or another social media platform). The location is the URL, and the date is the date posted rather than the date accessed.

**Example**

> Kayyem, Juliette. “A school district police department that did not need to exist should never exist again.” *Twitter,* 7 Oct. 2022, <https://twitter.com/juliettekayyem/status/1578447720720699392>.



 

 

 



###    How do you cite an episode of a podcast?  expand\_more  

 

When citing a podcast, the narrator or host should be listed in the author position, and the title of the episode should be listed as the title. The title of the whole podcast is the “container,” followed by season and episode numbers. You should then provide either the date of the podcast or the copyright date of the website, followed by the URL.

> Nancy Updike, narrator. “Black Box.” *We Were Three,* episode 1, 13 Oct. 2022, <https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/we-were-three/id1648534112>.



 

 

 



###    What if the source I am citing has no page numbers?  expand\_more  

 

 If the source has no page numbers, then you should not include any in your citations. Don’t count the pages yourself and number them since a reader may print or view the document differently, and this will create confusion.



 

 

 



###    What if I want to cite a quotation that is quoted in someone else’s  expand\_more  

 

You should avoid citing a source you have not consulted. If you can consult the original source in which the quotation appeared, then you should do that. If you cannot consult the original source, you should cite the source where *you* found the quotation. When you are citing a quotation that was quoted in someone else’s book, you should indicate this in the following way:

> Author Amy Bloom described her husband’s early symptoms of Alzheimer’s as “names disappearing, repetition, information turned upside down, appointments and medications scrambled” (qtd. in Van Booy).



 

 

 



 

 

 

 

##  PDFs for This Section 

 



  [### Online Library and Citation Tools

 ](/sites/g/files/omnuum4606/files/2025-01/Online%20Library%20and%20Citation%20Tools.pdf) 

   [### MLA

 ](/sites/g/files/omnuum4606/files/2025-01/MLA.pdf) 

   [### APA

 ](/sites/g/files/omnuum4606/files/2025-01/APA.pdf) 

   [### Chicago

 ](/sites/g/files/omnuum4606/files/2025-01/Chicago.pdf) 

   [### Citing Sources

 ](/sites/g/files/omnuum4606/files/2025-01/Citing%20Sources_0.pdf)