Paraphrasing and Summarizing Services
We charge low rates as we don't conduct any kind of original research work while paraphrasing or summarizing. Paraphrasing is commonly used everywhere and most of the content/text you see/read on the internet, articles, journals, etc. is paraphrased. We provide all kinds of human paraphrasing services whether you want to paraphrase a term paper or looking for a service to paraphrase your official report, blog, harvard referencing paraphrasing etc. we are here to provide premium quality paraphrasing services. We also specialize in providing human summarizing services. Send us the content that needs a summary and let us know the number of pages you want in it. We will summarize your long content in fewer words to make it more relevant and attractive to readers. At times, readers are not interested in the full details of a topic, and sometimes it is required/instructed to convey more information in fewer words thus always rely on a summarizing expert for all your summarizing needs. Noteworthy: Please note that we never use any AI software or tools. All the content is paraphrased or summarized by human expert writers.
Do you cite every sentence? The beginning and end of the paragraph? It often comes as a surprise to find out that the answer is: You only cite it once, on first mention of the text. We did this above when we introduced the text with our author(s) and date. If you’re worried that it’s not clear that you’re continuing to cite the same work, one way you can signal to the reader that you’re writing a long paraphrase is to refer back to the authors or researchers. You’ll see in the long paraphrase example, one way I signaled that we’re still referring to the same text was by saying: “They argue” and “The researchers proceed to assert… So, with all this in mind, are there any circumstances where you DO need to reintroduce the citation? The answer is: Yes! 1. If the paraphrase continues into a different paragraph, you would reintroduce the citation in the next paragraph.
This paraphrase has two key problems: it doesn’t cite the original source, and it copies too much of the original wording and sentence structure. Correct: Even though the YouTube video of the dancing plumber was only posted last week, it has already had more than 400,000 views. Topen has become an almost instant celebrity as strangers have even asked him for autographs (“Plumber Caught Dancing On The Job Has All The Fly Moves”). Original source: “According to Heat magazine, Miley has a list of intense rules for her men-to-be while out on dates. Apparently her assistant arranges what the guy must wear, do, and talk about on the date. Incorrect: According to Heat magazine, Miley Cyrus has a list of rules for her men on dates. Her assistant arranges what guys wear and what they talk about. She doesn’t like flowers, either (“These Are Miley Cyrus’ Crazy Dating Rules”). This isn’t even a paraphrase.
“We even got the classic one about how the student, while stoned, realized that the solar system is an atom and the earth is an electron. Incorrect: A college admissions officer told the story of a student who didn’t get into college because he wrote an admission essay about the movie Animal House (“10 Crazy Reasons People Got Rejected From College”). Remember what I said earlier about writing an accurate paraphrase? This is a good example. This attempted paraphrase is about college admissions essays, but that’s where the accuracy stops. Make sure to read the source carefully so you paraphrase correctly. Correct: College admissions officers generally tell students not to write their admissions essays about a lesson they learned when being stoned or drunk; however, some students still ignore the advice. For instance, one student wrote about the conversation in Animal House, as if it were his own stoned experience, about the solar system as an atom and the earth as an election (“10 Crazy Reasons People Got Rejected From College”).