Hyphenation in Dictionary Entry MLA-style
Hello,
what's up with the hyphenation in citing dictionary entries (MLA-style), both in text and in the reference list?
Whenever I cite a dictionary entry it comes up like this:
In-text: "Therefore, Social Media is also the term of choice in this thesis to describe the entirety of digital technologies and media through which people communicate (cf. ‘So-cial Me-dia’)."
Reference list: ‘So-cial Me-dia’. Duden Online, https://www.duden.de/node/822718/revisions/1668750/view. Accessed 5 June 2018.
I checked both the latest MLA Handbook and the website, but there are no references to hyphenation. Is this supposed to be like this or only happening to me?
Thank you a lot for explaining this to me (and possibly come up with a solution to get rid of the hyphens as I do not see MLA-style requiring it)!
All the best,
Julia
what's up with the hyphenation in citing dictionary entries (MLA-style), both in text and in the reference list?
Whenever I cite a dictionary entry it comes up like this:
In-text: "Therefore, Social Media is also the term of choice in this thesis to describe the entirety of digital technologies and media through which people communicate (cf. ‘So-cial Me-dia’)."
Reference list: ‘So-cial Me-dia’. Duden Online, https://www.duden.de/node/822718/revisions/1668750/view. Accessed 5 June 2018.
I checked both the latest MLA Handbook and the website, but there are no references to hyphenation. Is this supposed to be like this or only happening to me?
Thank you a lot for explaining this to me (and possibly come up with a solution to get rid of the hyphens as I do not see MLA-style requiring it)!
All the best,
Julia
Just checked with entries from a different dictionary, which come out fine. So this must be a problem of that particular online dictionary (www.duden.de)...guess I have to manually alter those entries, but never like to do that and it is still weird, isn't it?!