Intellectual Property is the products of your own original work. This includes writing, artwork, fiction, photographs, etc. To demonstrate respect for others' intellectual property, you must give credit where it is due. Respect the intellectual property of others - authors, artists, creators, producers - by paraphrasing and citing your sources.
Citation is the act of providing basic identifying information about a book, webpage, DVD, or other publication. Citations allow readers/viewers to find the full text of that publication.
Citation Style refers to the specific details of a citation, how it is ordered and formatted including punctuation. Common styles include MLA, APA, and Chicago.
Bibliography is a list of citations. When the bibliography refers articles, books, websites, videos, etc. that are mentioned in a paper, the bibliography is called a Works Cited (MLA style) or References (APA style).
Annotated Bibliography is a list of citations accompanied by commentary that may describe or summarize the content and quality of the source. Often the Annotated Bibliography includes a statement about the source’s relative usefulness in addressing the thesis or focus of a paper.
Parenthetical Citations are citations found in the body of your paper that refer to the full citation listed in your Works Cited. Parenthetical or in-text citations immediately clarify for readers the source of the information.