Which sentence correctly describes the difference between a reference included as an in-text citation and a reference listed on the works cited page?(1 point)

Responses

An in-text citation includes at least the author, title, publisher, and copyright date; a reference on a works cited page includes only the author and page number.
An in-text citation includes at least the author, title, publisher, and copyright date; a reference on a works cited page includes only the author and page number.

An in-text citation includes the author and page number; a reference on a works cited page includes the author, title, publisher, and copyright date.
An in-text citation includes the author and page number; a reference on a works cited page includes the author, title, publisher, and copyright date.

A reference included as an in-text citation is formatted the same as a reference included on a works cited page.
A reference included as an in-text citation is formatted the same as a reference included on a works cited page.

A reference used as an in-text citation includes only the title; a reference included on a works cited page lists only the author and publisher.

1 answer

The correct sentence that describes the difference is:

"An in-text citation includes the author and page number; a reference on a works cited page includes the author, title, publisher, and copyright date."

This accurately reflects the typical format of in-text citations and works cited entries in academic writing.