answers1: It the article doesn't say, then it is unnamed staff at
World Book that wrote it. <br>
<br>
ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLE or DICTIONARY ENTRY, UNSIGNED MLA 5.6.8 <br>
<br>
"Onomatopoeia." Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. 11th ed. 2003.
answers2: For that type of reference you don't have to cite the
author. Encyclopedia's have different citation rules. <br>
<br>
Something like this (depending on what our teacher requires): <br>
<br>
World Book Encyclopedia. 2007. "Name of Article".
answers3: there should be a name.. <br>
or ask a teacher tomorrow.
answers4: Usually with MLA documentation, if it's unknown, you can
leave the name out of the works cited page and just fill in the info
you know. But there should be a name with the article, so double
check. If you have any documentation issues, you can go to
http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/p04_c08_o.html
answers5: hmm...maybe you could look around in the back or around
where the article was. i don't rly use encyclopedia's that much, but
maybe that's what you could do. it was kinda like that in a book i
used for a research paper that had tons of articles and many different
articles. sry if this doesn't help. good luck!
answers6: If its an encyclopedia you don't put the author's name in
the bibliography unless its listed with the article. And since you're
asking I assume it isn't. I think there is a certain way that you are
supposed to site an encyclopedia but I don't know what it is. If you
have to just use the publisher or the name of the editor.
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