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Create an entry for a works-cited list with the following information. Remember, your capitalization, spacing, and punctuation must be exact.

NOTE: If you need to use italics or underlining, but you are unable to apply different font styles to your text, then you may omit those styles.

On April 17, 2009, Kari Ridge sent an email to ask Davis Hamletter, an expert on nuclear power plants, about methods for storing nuclear fuel. Kari received a reply the same day.

im struggling in english i need help please

User Ganeshran
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2 Answers

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Answer:

Ridge, Kari. "Methods for Storing Nuclear Fuel." Received by Davis Hamletter, 17 April, 2009.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Vitae Aliquam
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5 votes

Answer and explanation:

Hello. This question is a bit unclear, so I'll provide you answers according to each possible scenario.

When citing an e-mail, this is the format we should use in the works-cited page:

Last name, First Name. "Title/Subject of the E-mail." Received by recipient, day month, year.

1. If we are creating an entry for a works-cited list about the first e-mail that was sent by Kari, it would be like this:

Ridge, Kari. "Methods for Storing Nuclear Fuel." Received by Davis Hamletter, 17 April, 2009.

Note: the subject of the e-mail (its title, so to speak) was not mentioned in the information provided. But, since we know the e-mail is about "methods for storing nuclear fuel", I used that as the title.

2. Now, if we are creating an entry for the reply sent to Kari, it would be like this:

Hamletter, Davis. "Re: Methods for Storing Nuclear Fuel." Received by Kari Ridge, 17 April, 2009.

User Sada
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