What’s the difference between APA and Chicago author-date citations?
The difference between APA and Chicago author-date citations is as follows:
- APA in-text citations need an author, year, and page for quotations but not paraphrases. Chicago author-date citations (e.g., Chicago book citations) need the author, year, and page for both quotes and paraphrases.
- APA requires “p.” before a page number, but Chicago style does not.
- APA signal phrases use past-tense verbs, and Chicago requires present-tense verbs.
- APA reference page entries use sentence case for book and article titles. Chicago reference entries use title case for all titles.
APA | Bradshaw and Ellis (2016) explained, “First impressions are crucial—if either the dog or cat is spooked during their first actual physical encounter, later meetings are less likely to go well” (p. 150). |
Chicago | Bradshaw and Ellis (2016) explain, “First impressions are crucial—if either the dog or cat is spooked during their first actual physical encounter, later meetings are less likely to go well” (150). |
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