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  1. 23 wrz 2022 · Use sic to indicate that quoted text has been reproduced exactly without any changes or corrections to spelling or grammar. In formal writing, sic is generally italicized and enclosed in brackets. In news copy, it is often enclosed in parentheses.

  2. [Sic] signals that a quote appears as originally found, without edits. Sic usually appears in parentheses or brackets, sometimes with the letters in italics. In this context it means “intentionally so written.”

  3. If any incorrect spelling, punctuation, or grammar in the source might confuse readers, insert the word “[sic],” italicized and in brackets, immediately after the error in the quotation.

  4. 26 paź 2023 · The Chicago Manual of Style says to use sic (italicised and in square brackets) to draw attention to an error in a quotation. However, unless it is important to preserve the error, it is better to simply correct minor errors in quoted text.

  5. 24 lip 2014 · 'Sic' is specifically used when you don't want to correct the quotation (e.g. to highlight an error in the original text). If you do need to correct, edit or add to a quotation, you would put the corrected text in square brackets instead.

  6. 15 sty 2024 · When "sic" appears in quoted text, it's meant to inform the reader that the writer copied the quoted text verbatim from the original source. This is typically necessary when a misspelling, grammatical error, or other error appears in the original source.

  7. “[Sic]” is used to mark spelling and grammatical errors in a quoted text in order to inform the reader that the error was made by the writer being quoted, not the writer of the text they’re currently reading.

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