HTMLQuotation and Citation Elements
In this chapter we will go through the<blockquote>
,<q>
,<abbr>
,<address>
,<cite>
, and<bdo>
HTML elements.
Example
Here is a quote from WWF's website:
For 60 years, WWF has worked to help people and nature thrive. As the world's leading conservation organization, WWF works in nearly 100 countries. At every level, we collaborate with people around the world to develop and deliver innovative solutions that protect communities, wildlife, and the places in which they live.
HTML <blockquote> for Quotations
The HTML<blockquote>
element defines a section that is quoted from another source.
Browsers usually indent<blockquote>
elements.
Example
<blockquote cite="http://www.worldwildlife.org/who/index.html">
For 60 years, WWF has worked to help people and nature thrive. As the world's leading conservation organization, WWF works in nearly 100 countries. At every level, we collaborate with people around the world to develop and deliver innovative solutions that protect communities, wildlife, and the places in which they live.
</blockquote>
HTML <q> for Short Quotations
The HTML<q>
tag defines a short quotation.
Browsers normally insert quotation marks around the quotation.
Example
HTML <abbr> for Abbreviations
The HTML<abbr>
tag defines an abbreviation or an acronym, like "HTML", "CSS", "Mr.", "Dr.", "ASAP", "ATM".
Marking abbreviations can give useful information to browsers, translation systems and search-engines.
Tip: Use the global title attribute to show the description for the abbreviation/acronym when you mouse over the element.
Example
HTML <address> for Contact Information
The HTML<address>
tag defines the contact information for the author/owner of a document or an article.
The contact information can be an email address, URL, physical address, phone number, social media handle, etc.
The text in the<address>
element usually renders initalic, and browsers willalways add a line break before and after the<address>
element.
Example
Written by John Doe.<br>
Visit us at:<br>
Example.com<br>
Box 564, Disneyland<br>
USA
</address>
HTML <cite> for Work Title
The HTML<cite>
tag defines the title of a creative work (e.g. a book, a poem, a song, a movie, a painting, a sculpture, etc.).
Note: A person's name is not the title of a work.
The text in the<cite>
element usually renders initalic.
HTML <bdo> for Bi-Directional Override
BDO stands for Bi-Directional Override.
The HTML<bdo>
tag is used to override the current text direction:
HTML Quotation and Citation Elements
Tag | Description |
---|---|
<abbr> | Defines an abbreviation or acronym |
<address> | Defines contact information for the author/owner of a document |
<bdo> | Defines the text direction |
<blockquote> | Defines a section that is quoted from another source |
<cite> | Defines the title of a work |
<q> | Defines a short inline quotation |
For a complete list of all available HTML tags, visit ourHTML Tag Reference.