How To Cite Multiple Authors In MLA In-Text?

2026-06-08 10:04:58 305
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3 Answers

Isla
Isla
2026-06-09 18:00:57
Citing multiple authors in MLA is one of those things that seems intimidating until you do it a few times. Two authors? Easy—just list both, like (Hernandez and Lopez 104). Three or more? Use the first author’s name plus 'et al.', no matter how many others there are. I remember sweating over a paper once because I kept second-guessing whether I needed to list all four authors every time, but nope—MLA’s got your back with that shorthand.

A pro tip: if you’re citing two different works with the same lead author and et al., add a shortened title to distinguish them, like (Lee et al., 'Solar Flares' 15) and (Lee et al., 'Moon Phases' 30). It keeps everything crystal clear for your reader. After a while, you’ll start doing it without even thinking.
David
David
2026-06-12 14:31:53
MLA in-text citations for multiple authors can feel like a puzzle at first, but once you get the hang of it, it’s pretty straightforward. For two authors, you list both surnames joined by 'and', like (Smith and Jones 45). With three or more, you use the first author’s name followed by 'et al.', which is short for 'and others'—so (Smith et al. 45). The key is consistency; if your Works Cited entry starts with Smith, Jones, and Lee, the in-text citation should match that order.

One thing I’ve noticed is that people sometimes overcomplicate it by adding unnecessary details. The page number always goes at the end, no commas needed between the name and the number. And if you’re citing multiple works by the same authors, you’ll need to add a shortened title to avoid confusion, like (Smith and Jones, 'Night Sky' 45). It’s one of those formatting quirks that becomes second nature after a while, though I still double-check my citations before submitting anything important.
Dylan
Dylan
2026-06-14 18:15:28
I used to dread citing multiple authors until I realized MLA actually keeps it pretty simple. For two authors, just slap both names in parentheses with an 'and' in between—no fuss. Three or more? 'Et al.' is your best friend. The first time I saw it, I thought it was some fancy Latin term, but it just means 'and others.' So instead of cramming all three names into your sentence, you can just write (Green et al. 22) and call it a day.

What tripped me up at first was remembering to list them in the same order as the Works Cited page. If the book’s by Adams, Brown, and Clark, your citation shouldn’t suddenly become (Brown et al. 22). Also, if you mention the authors in your sentence, like 'Adams and Brown argue...', you only need the page number in parentheses. Little tricks like that save so much time once you internalize them.
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