Supplementary materials added to appellate brief.
The part of a book's back matter that includes lists of resources, tables, or other reference material.
Supplementary materials printed at the end of the general text.
Material that doesn't fit within the body of the book is often included in an appendix. In a software manual, a table of shortcuts might appear in an appendix. A craft book might have an appendix listing names, addresses, and other contact information for craft supplies and other resources mentioned in the book. A technical manual that must include lengthy warranty information might put it in an appendix instead of in the title page.
An appendix in a Book or Article
supplementary material that is collected and appended at the back of a book
a great place to add material that could increase the marketability of your book with special audiences
a group of supplementary material appended to a text
Supplementary information at the end of a book, which can include tables and statistical information.
Part of book that follows a chapter (end-of-chapter appendix) or, more commonly, that comes after all the chapters (end-of-book appendix). An appendix contains supplemental material, such as tables or source material, which does not conveniently fit into a chapter.
additional information following the main part of a book
An additional section at the end of a book or document.
A section of a book containing supplementary materials such as tables or maps.
A section of text that is related to material in book, but which typically does not contain essential information. Often, an appendix provides supplementary information that some people find useful, but which many people would find irrelevant. An appendix forms part of the end matter. ASD Simplified Technical English(tm) controlled language that is used in the aircraft industry. Previously known as AECMA Simplified English. For more information see ' Beyond Plain English'.
(pl. appendices) a short section at the end of a book, often used for supplementary information.
Follows the text of a book and contains notes, charts, tables, lists, or other detailed information discussed in the text.
Material subordinate to the text of the work, printed and bound immediately after it. Planned from the beginning of a job.
Notes, charts, tables, lists, or other detailed information that follow the main text of a book.
A collection of supplementary material, usually at the end of a book
material which is not part of the main text appearing at the end of a book.
A bound volume – or set of volumes – of documents filed in the trial court that can be made part of the record before the California Court of Appeal. This is an alternative to having a "Clerk's Transcript" (see below). The fundamental difference is that the trial court compiles the Clerk's Transcript based on instructions given very soon after the notice of appeal is filed, whereas the parties themselves prepare the Appendix (separately or jointly) and file this with the Court of Appeal with their briefs. There are pros and cons to both methods.
Additional material or information, generally at the end of a book
Additional or supplementary material generally found at the end of a book.
Documents or text that enhance the readers understanding of the material covered in a book or other information source, but that do not need to be included in the main body of the work. This material is often included at the end in one or more appendices. Some examples are historical documents, statistical tables, or explanatory notes. Atlas A collection of maps, plates and other visual representations of geographical areas that illustrate the location of physical features such as rivers, mountains; political features such as capital cities, country boundaries, and/or demographic characteristics such as population density, chief products, etc. See also: Reference book.
A compilation of supplementary materials such as copies of court records and portions of a transcript filed in a case that is required to be filed on appeal along with the briefs. rraignment: A proceeding held in the early stages of a criminal case after the filing of an indictment or information. The purpose of an arraignment is to allow a person accused of a crime to hear the charges in court and to enter a plea. In Iowa, a defendant may file a written arraignment in lieu of a court proceeding. ttorney: A person who is licensed to give legal advice or to act as a representative for another in a court proceeding; a lawyer.