In-text citation
As a 2005 study by Salary.com and America Online indicates, the Internet ranked as the top choice among employees for ways of wasting time on the job; it beat talking with co-workers—the second most popular method—by a margin of nearly two to one (Frauenheim).
Explain
Omit the page number if a work lacks page numbers, as is the case with many Web sources. If a Web site numbers its paragraphs or screens, give the abbreviation “par.” or “pars.” or the word “screen” or “screens” in the parentheses: (Smith, par. 4).
Works cited entry
Frauenheim, Ed. “Stop Reading This Headline and Get Back to Work.” CNET News.com. CNET Networks, 11 July 2005. Web. 17 Feb. 2009.
Show me
Also see Web source with page numbers.
Directory to MLA in-text citation models
Exercise: MLA documentation: in-text citations 1
Exercise: MLA documentation: in-text citations 2
Exercise: MLA documentation: in-text citations 3