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Topic : Re: How to cite a combination I expected this simple, but cannot find any good source. Assume there are two sources, source A and source B. Both are different from each other, that is A provides - selfpublishingguru.com

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Like @Ankit below, you should do it that way. I cam across a statistic that came from multiple people. The author cited them like this: (I'm not going to use actual names, just random ones as an example)

[Statistic.] (Jones and Capping)

Jones and Capping would both be last names. If you can, also indicate where the citation is, as in the number. Example:

[Statistic.] (Jones and Capping)^1

Or

[Statistic.] (Jones and Capping)[1]

The number would indicate which citation to look at, which is generally provided at the end. If this is a book, you could either do it at the end of each chapter or at the end of the book. Example of citations:

[1] (APA citation)

[2] (APA citation)

[3] (APA citation)

The [1] or ^1 would indicate that the citation to look at is [1].


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