List the title of the Web page, followed by a period. Capitalize only the first letter of the title, as well as the first letters of proper nouns. For example: Cats in southern China and their babies.
List the date of publication in parentheses, followed by a period. The date should appear in the following format: (Year, Month Day). For example: (2011, January 12). If no date of publication is listed, use "n.d." instead. For example: (n.d.).
List the full URL in the following format:
Retrieved from http://www.catweb.com/kittiesandcats/asia/china/pics
Ensure that the finished citation appears in the following format:
Cats in southern China and their babies. (2011, January 12). Retrieved from http://www.catweb.com/kittiesandcats/asia/china/pics
Alphabetize your citation according to the title, since there is no known author. Your reference entry for "Cats in southern China" would appear after a reference authored by James Case and before a reference authored by Jim Dale.
List the title in quotation marks, followed by a period. For example:
"Cats in Southern China and Their Babies."
List the name of the website in italics, followed by a period. For example:
catweb.com.
List the name of the publisher, followed by a comma. For example:
Catweb,
If no publisher name can be located or discerned, use "n.p."
List the date of publication in a day-month-year format, followed by a period. The names of months other than May should be abbreviated. For example:
12 Jan. 2011.
If no date of publication can be found, use "n.d."
List the medium of publication, followed by a period. This should appear as follows:
Web.
List the day on which you accessed the website in a day-month-year format, followed by a period. For example:
1 Mar. 2011.
List the full URL in angle brackets as the last line of your citation. Do this only if you wish or your professor requires it, as MLA style no longer requires the use of URLs. For example:
<http://www.catweb.com/kittiesandcats/asia/china/pics>
Ensure that your finished citation appears in the following format:
"Cats in Southern China and Their Babies." catweb.com. Catweb, 12 Jan. 2011. Web. 1 Mar. 2011.
<http://www.catweb.com/kittiesandcats/asia/china/pics>
Alphabetize your citation according to the title, since there is no known author. Your reference entry for "Cats in Southern China" would appear after a reference authored by James Case and before a reference authored by Jim Dale.