A reference to decided cases, or books of authority, to prove a point in law.
The information which identifies a book or article. The citation for a book usually includes the author, title, place of publication, publisher and date. The citation for an article includes the author, title of the article, title of the periodical, volume, page(s) and date. Refer to a style manual for more detailed information on citations and how to format them.
the written information needed to identify or locate an article, book, book chapter or other source used in a research paper.
A reference to a legal precedent or authority (such as a case, statute, or treatise) that supports or contradicts a given position. In this service, you can retrieve a document or access KeyCite information for a document by typing the document's citation. See Finding a Document and Checking a Document in KeyCite for details.
1 ) Information that precisely identifies a book, journal article, web site, etc. Citations usually include author, title, page numbers, volume numbers, dates of publication, publisher, etc. The word "citation" can also refer to the form for references at the end of a research paper or an article. Some commonly used citation styles at University of South Florida are APA (American Psychological Association) and MLA (Modern Language Association). Individual publishers often have their own style manuals. There are also guides available for citing electronic resources.
A reference to the full text of a statute, case, or other source of legal information.
A writ or order issued by a court commanding the person named therein to appear at the time and place named; also the written reference to legal authorities, precedents, reported cases, etc., in briefs or other legal documents.
Indicates where the information can be located. (410 U.S. 113). There are 3 basic parts to a citation. The first number refers to the volume, the letters to the source, and the second numbers refer to the page. When seeing the citation 410 U.S. 113, you should recognize that as volume 410 of the Untied States Reports page 113.
the written information that identifies a book or article necessary to locate the item or to include as a reference in your paper. A citation usually includes information such as author, title, pages, and dates.
The listing of a work with the bibliographic information (author, title, publisher, date, volume, etc.) necessary to identify and locate the work.
The mention of referring to another person's book or passage in your own words. Also referred to as quotation
All the information necessary to locate a specific information resource. Citations usually follow strict formats, which can be found in style guides.
the attribution of an author and source; a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage.
A statement providing information such as author, title, and publisher that is necessary to identify a particular book, article, or other resource. Citations are also sometimes called references, and they are written in standard formats, or styles. Here's a citation written in A.P.A. style: Atkinson, R. C. (1988). Stevens' Handbook of Experimental Psychology (2nd ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Sufficient bibliographic information about a specific item - to enable the reader to locate the cited item. A citation includes author, title, place of publication, publisher and year, if the item is a book. If the item is a journal, it includes author, title of the article, title of the journal, volume number, page and date.
The information needed to find a publication. For books this is generally the author, title, edition, publisher and publication year. For journal articles it is the author, article title, journal title, date of publication and page numbers.
the same as a *BIBLIOGRAPHIC REFERENCE. Can also refer to one item in a list of works cited: a common term for a list of references at the end of a journal article.
Specifying a particular authority for a point of law, as a case by title, volume and page of the report in which the opinion appears.
A written reference to a specific work (book, article, dissertation, report, musical composition, etc.) by a particular author or creator which identifies the document in which the work may be found. Citation format varies from one field of study to another. Citation style manuals are usually available at the reference desk in academic libraries.
a bibliographic record of a journal article. It includes many fields, such as the author, article title, journal title, volume, page numbers, and year, and is the basic information you need to locate the journal article. Also called a "reference".
a reference to a book or other source of legal authority
A passage quoted to give credit to the one who said owns it.
Information that indicates exactly how to find a book, periodical article, Web site or other information. The citation provides author, title, publisher and date; in the case of chapters and periodical articles it also includes page numbers.
A complete reference to a book or article that has all the information necessary to identify it and find it. Book citations usually include the author, title, place of publication, publisher, and year. Journal citations usually include the author, title, journal name, date, volume, issue, and pages.
The basic information needed to find specific materials. For books this information usually included the author, title, place of publication, publisher, and date. For articles, the citation usually includes author, title, name of journal, date, volume, and pages. A collection of citations is called a bibliography.
The essential information for locating a book, periodical article or other source of information. Author, title, publisher, periodical title, publication date and page are some of the key elements of a citation. The format of a citation is often determined by a particular style manual. See also: Title page.
Information needed to identify a book or article; includes author, title, publisher, date, etc.
The basic information needed to find specific materials. For a book this information includes author, title, place of publication, publisher, and date published. When the book is "cited" by another author, page number(s) may be included. For an article, the citation usually includes author, title, name of journal, date, volume, and pages.
Information that precisely identifies a book or an article; includes author, title, volume, page numbers and publication information. Often other information such as subject headings or index terms will be included in a citation. Electronic (or computerized) indexes are databases of citations to books, articles, etc.
A reference made to a source used, whether that source is print, image, or media, including Internet sources. Citations should include the information someone would need to find the source materials. There are different accepted formalized citation styles, including MLA, APA, and Chicago. Instructors will generally have a preference.
information that fully identifies a publication; usually featuring the author, title, name of work, publisher, and date. Page and volume numbers plus other information may be included. Controlled Vocabulary - a set of standard terms specifically chosen to describe the contents of items found within a database.
The information which identifies a book, article or other publication so that you can locate it. A citation for a book usually includes the author, title, place of publication, publisher and date of publication; a citation for an article includes the author, title of the article, title of the periodical, volume and sometimes issue number, date and pages. A list of citations, sometimes called a bibliography or reference list, usually appears at the end of an academic, or scholarly publication.
The information needed for someone to find an item. For example, the bibliographic citation for a book would contain the title, author, place of publication, publisher and year of publication.
(sy-tay-shun) citation can refer to (1) a passage or quotation from a text, or (2) a reference to an authority or precedent.
reference to a document or part of a document from which a passage is quoted, or to a source regarded as an authority for a statement or proposition. (Keenan, p.22)
A reference to a text or part of a text identifying the document in which it may be found.
(law) the act of citing (as of spoken words or written passages or legal precedents etc.)
a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage; "the student's essay failed to list several important citations"; "the acknowledgments are usually printed at the front of a book"; "the article includes mention of similar clinical cases"
a passage or expression that is quoted or cited
a bibliographic reference to a specific source--a book, an article, or other source of information
a brief description of an information source, giving enough data to enable someone else to quickly and easily find the source
a brief form of reference inserted parenthetically within the running text or appended as a note at the foot of the page, at the end of a chapter, or at the end of the complete text
a couple of lines of information telling you exactly what articles talk about your topic
a credit or reference to another document or source
a description of a resource in a very specific format, including elements such as title, author, publisher, etc
a description of the published item
a listing for a law or regulation which includes the title or chapter number, the name of the collection, and the sections and paragraph numbers
a listing of source material
a method of referring your reader to the source you have used for an exact quotation, a paraphrase, or an idea (see below for examples and further explanation)
an occurrence of a specific tune in a specific source
a quick and dirty reference in the text of a document that the reader can use to locate the full reference on the reference page
a reference published with a scholarly journal article
a reference to a magazine article , book , book chapter,
a reference to an information claim
a reference to an item from which a quotation or information was taken or to which a person is being directed
a reference to a source of information, whether it is a journal article, a portion of a book, or a Web page
a reference to a source of some kind, and should not be confused with quotation which means repeating something that someone else has said
a reference to a source used in an article, essay, book, etc
a reference to legal authorities and precedents such as statutes, cases, regulations, and law review articles
a short description of an article
a short, multi-part description of a specific information source
a short quotation which contains a word or phrase that is the reason for its selection
a statement providing information such as author, title, and publisher that is necessary to identify a particular resource (in this case, a book review)
a way of identifying, and finding, a case in a set books reporting legal decisions
Information that identifies a book, an article, or other cited item. For a book, a citation should include the author, the title, the place of publication, the publisher, and the year of publication. For an article, a citation should include the author, the title of the article, the title of the periodical, volume and issue numbers, date of publication and the page numbers of the article.
A reference to a book, article, or other informational material listing such items as author, title, and date.
Information necessary to identify a book, article, or other document; a complete citation usually includes author, title, name of journal (for an article) or publisher (for a book), and date of issue/publication. Citations in periodical indexes also include page numbers for the article and the volume number of the journal.
Brief information describing a book, article, recording, or other publication. Standard elements included in citations are title, author(s), place of publication, publisher, date, periodical title, and format.
a reference note that generally includes elements necessary for the identification of a work (i.e., author, title, and date of publication for a book; author, title, name of periodical, volume number, date, and pages for an article).
All of the pertinent information needed to identify any type of publication. For a periodical article a citation would include the author and title of the article and the date, volume and page numbers of the periodical. For a book a citation will include the author and title of the book, the place of publication, publisher and date of publication.
Includes the article title, author, journal title, issue, date, page(s), and other information relevant to locating a copy of the article.
A reference to a specific piece of work or quotation which you may have used in an assignment, giving credit to the original author. Also known as a reference
A reference to a work or part of a work that gives the bibliographic information which identifies the material.
A reference or footnote to a book, article, or other material that contains all the information necessary to identify and locate the work. A book citation includes author, title, publisher and year of publication; a journal citation includes author, article title and periodical title, date, volume and page numbers of the particular article. This is the information you will need to write your bibliography (see Writing Guides). The term citation is also referred to as the complete information about an article when it is found in an article database.
The information needed to identify a resources, such as the author, title, publisher, date and place of publication.
Legal shorthand for referring to cases, statutes, regulations and ordinances.
Listing of an article by title, author's name, publication name, publication date, and other details. Assists readers in locating the article.
A reference to a source that uniquely identifies it e.g., a bibliographic reference.
A reference to a document giving identification of the document. Usually includes author, title of the work and the source where it is published. Also known as a bibliographic reference. Use the "Back" button at the top of your screen to return to the previous screen.
A written reference to a specific work (book, article, report, musical composition, etc.) by a particular author or creator. Citation format varies from one publication to another. Your professor may specify a particular citation style for a research paper. Please see APA and MLA style manuals on the Ready Reference shelf next to the Reference Desk.
When you search databases or catalogs, the information you get back consists of citations. A citation is information about an article or a book, like an entry in a bibliography. This would include the title of the article, the journal or magazine it was published in, the date published, the volume and issue of the journal, and the page numbers. You usually need all this information to be able to find an article in the library. An example of an article citation is: "Intellectual community." By: Duncombe, Margaret. Liberal Education, Nov/Dec90, Vol. 76 Issue 5, p22, 4p.
Information about a book, journal article, or other source that you refer to or quote from in a paper. The citation includes all of the information needed to identify this source, such as author, title, publication information, date, and page numbers. Different disciplines can use different citation styles; be sure to consult the style manual that is appropriate for your course.
the basic bibliographic information about a resource. Includes title, author, publisher, date, page number, etc. Citations enable others to locate the sources used by an author. Multiple standards exist for citing resources. See: Understanding Citations and Citing your Research.
Written information about a book or journal article. A complete citation can includes information such as author, page numbers, volume number and publication date.
information about a publication or other item that will help someone identify and locate that publication. For example, a citation to a journal article will usually include the author and title of the article, the title of the journal, the volume number, page numbers and the date of publication.
Is a written reference to a specific work or portion of a work (book, article, dissertation, report, musical composition, etc.) by a particular author, editor, composer, etc., which clearly identifies the document in which the work is to be found.
A reference to, or information about, an item. Typically citations have three parts: author, title, and publication information. A list of citations is often referred to as a bibliography.
brief, identifying information about a book, article, video, or other document. Citations are used in library catalogues and article indexes, and also in bibliographies or works cited at the end of. There are several citation styles, but in general the following elements are present in a citation: a book citation includes the author, title, publisher, place and date published an article citation includes the author, article title, name of the magazine or journal, volume, issue number, pages, and publication date.
for a book, the citation includes author, title, place of publication, publisher, and publication year. For an article, the citation includes author, title of article, title of the journal, volume, issue number, publication year, and page numbers.
The information needed to track down a book, article, or other work. For books, this includes the author, title, place and year of publication. For articles, it consists of the author, article title, page numbers, periodical title, volume and date. Citing is the act of giving credit to an original source.
information about a source from which you quote, paraphrase or summarize examples of citations include parenthetical references, footnotes, endnotes, and references in a bibliography The purpose of a citation is to help readers locate the sources of your information and ideas.
An explicit acknowledgement of the source of information.
Provides essential information about a book or a journal article. Citations usually include the author, title of the book, publication date and page number/s. If the citation refers to a journal article, it will include the title of the article, its author, the journal title and volume number, publication date and page number/s. This information will be needed to find the item in a library. You will find citations in reading lists, periodical indexes and bibliographies.
a bibliographic representation of a journal article or a book chapter, etc; one unit in a bibliographic database. It includes many fields, such as the author, article title, journal title, year, volume, issue and page numbers and is the information you need to locate the article or book. Synonym of Record.
Sufficient bibliographic information about a specific item to enable the reader to locate it. A citation includes author, title, place of publication, publisher and year, if the item is a book. If the item is an article, it includes author, title of the article, title of the periodical, volume number, page and date. Citations are used in assignments to indicate the source of text that has been quoted.
The information needed to locate the source of information. This information is needed both for you to find the source to begin with, as well as for anyone who reads your work and wishes to read more about it. For a book, this includes the author of the book, title, publisher plus place and date of publication. If the citation is to specific pages in the book, this must be included as well. Citations for an article include the author and title of the article, name of the periodical, pages and date of publication. For more information or to see specific examples see a style manual.
Description of an item which contains enough information to identify that item. A complete citation usually includes: For journal articles: author, title, name of journal, date, pages, and volume and/or issue number. For books: author, title, date, publisher
reference to an item (such a book or article). A citation contains the author, title, date of publication and any other information needed to locate the item.
1. A note referring to a work from which a passage is quoted or to some sources as authority for a statement of proposition. 2. Especially in law books, a quotation from, or a reference to, statutes, decided cases, or other authorities.
A reference to a particular work containing bibliographic information such as author, title, publisher, etc.
Written information about an item (book, article, etc.) which is needed to identify it. This usually includes author, title, date, journal or book title, and volume, issue, and page numbers.
A bibliographic reference or record which includes the information necessary to locate a source, such as author, page numbers and dates. Citations follow a standardized format, such as the MLA format, which may vary according to the discipline or the index.
An entry in a bibliography or catalogue referring to a specific work (book, chapter, journal article or thesis etc...) Contains enough details to make the work clearly identifiable; usually the author, title, place and year of publication, publisher and details of the edition (if published). If it is an article within a larger work, further details such as the title, editor and page numbers, volume number etc. are usually also included. Style guides (or manuals) exist which contain details on how works should be cited. The Music Department recommends that students use the MLA Hanbook (4th edition).
Basic information needed to identify an item or article.
The written information about a book or periodical article which you will need in order to locate the item. A citation usually consists of author, title, publisher and date, depending on the type of publication. Also, called a reference.
the record of an article, book, or other report in a bibliographic database that includes summary descriptive information, e.g., authors, title, abstract, source, and indexing terms.
a reference to a particular authority for a point of law. For example, a citation of case includes the title, volume, and page of the report in which the opinion appears.
The information that allows a reader to find a particular book or article. Citations usually include the author or editor name, the book or article title, journal volume and issue number, page number, the place and date of publication, and the publisher. Citations are arranged in very specific formats according to a style manual. Some style manuals used at Prescott College are APA, MLA, and CBE (McMillan).
A reference which fully identifies a publication; a complete citation usually includes: author, title, name of the journal (if the citation is to an article) or publisher (if to a book), and date. In addition, pages, volumes and other information are included in the citation to a journal's article.
A charging document, other than an indictment, information, or statement of charges, that is issued to a defendant by a peace officer or other person authorized by law to do so.
a reference to a text or part of a text. A citation may be made to a book, journal article, or other type of publication. It contains information necessary to identify and locate the work, including author, title and date.
The bibliographic details of an item or article. Usually includes author, title, date of publication, journal title, volume and page numbers. May include an abstract or brief description of the item.
Also called a reference. A citation is the information which identifies a source (book or article, etc.) that has been quoted or used as an authority. A citation for a book usually includes the author's name, title, place of publication, publisher, and date. A citation for a periodical (journal) article usually includes author, title of the article, title of the journal, volume number, page numbers, and date.
A reference that includes elements necessary to identify a work, usually author, title, and publication information. (Unit 4 A Primer on Databases and Catalogs; Unit 5 The Great GALILEO; Unit 8 Giving Credit Where Credit is Due)
A citation is a reference to a particular item, usually a book or periodical article, containing basic information about that item: author, title, source (if a periodical), publication information, date, etc.
A short notation of a book, article or other source in one of three forms: footnotes, endnotes, or parenthetical notes. [Citations are a cornerstone of scholarship as they provide attribution and accountability].
the source or authority from which information or data is taken. In genealogy, every fact needs at least one citation
the pertinent information needed to find the full text of a publication. Citation of a book generally includes: author(s), title, publisher, date. Citation of an article in a periodical generally includes: author(s), article title, source journal title, volume, pages, and date.
The citation of a book generally includes author(s), title, publisher, date. The citation of a journal article generally includes author(s), article title, journal title, volume, pages, and date.
A written reference to a work, either print or electronic, containing enough information so that the work can be located. There are many different styles for citations; for more information, see How and Why to Cite your Sources.
The information about a specific resource that identifies the title of the work, the author, date of publication and other information.
A reference to a work, such as a book or article; usually contains the title, author, and publication information. Citations are provided in bibliographies, indexes, and the lists of references in scholarly works. Citation formats vary according to field of study and/or requirements of particular publications. Citing sources provides information on how to correctly cite your sources of information.
Information that identifies a publication and includes author, title, name of journal/magazine, date, volume, pages. Provides sufficient information to locate the original item.
A written reference to a source of an idea, information, or image (book, article, report, musical composition, etc.) for the purpose of giving credit to the original author or creator. Citation format varies from one field of study to another.
A description which provides enough information about an item so that the reader can identify it. A book citation usually includes the author, title, publisher and place of publication, as well as the date. A journal or periodical citation includes the title of the article, the author of the article, the journal it is published in, the date, volume and pages numbers. A web page citation includes the title, author, URL, and date accessed.
Same as bibliographic citation.
Citations, in the research world, identify published information in order to locate that item again. Citations of articles include the author, title, magazine or journal name, volume and issue number, and page numbers. Citations of Web documents also include a URL and the date the information was accessed. The list of the sources you used when researching your paper is called a bibliography. These sources are listed in citation format and follow an established style, such as MLA (Modern Language Association), APA (American Psychological Association) or Chicago Manual of Style. The bibliography allows others who read your work to verify facts or research the same information more easily.
A reference to an exact source of information, usually contains author, title and publisher information if the source is a book and contains author, article title, journal title, publisher, volume and page number information if the source is a journal article.
an identifying reference to a text. Usually includes the title, author, and publishing information.
The information given in an index or catalog about a particular information source. The citation may include the article title, periodical title, book title, place of publication, publisher, volume, pages, and date. Refer to a style manual to learn how to format citations for your own bibliographies. Examples are: BOOK: Freedman, Richard R. What Do Unions Do? New York: Basic, 1984. ARTICLE: Prince, Dinah. "Marriage in the ‘80s." New York 1 June 1987: 30-38.
Information identifying a publication. Details usually include author, title, date of publication, journal title (if applicable), volume and page numbers. Also sometimes called References. Citations also refer to the standard reference for a law report.
Reference to a book, article or other resource providing very basic information needed to find where it is available
standardized information (title, author, publisher, date, etc.) about a book or journal article, provided so the item can be located and to give credit to the original author for work used by another. Cite - (1) as a verb, to provide a reference to a source. (2) as a noun, a shortened form of citation , (e.g., How many cites does the article have?)
Brief, concise information about a book or periodical title. PrairieCat book citations also contain information such as the author, title, publisher, year of publication, as well as its call number, location, and whether or not it can circulate. A periodical citation contains information such as author, article title, journal title, its volume and issue number, date, and page numbers. At times, citations include a summary or an abstract of an article.
an abbreviated representation of a source; contains enough information for someone to obtain an copy of the source, such as author(s), title, source, publisher, year of publication, page numbers, etc. There are many citation formats for citation consistency; details about citation format can be found in the appropriate style manuals.
Reference to legal authority, such a case, statute, regulation or ordinance.
A method of documenting a work by using a series of identifiable elements to represent or describe sources used. A typical citation would contain: author, title, publication information, and other appropriate information such as page numbers. The exact form and format of a citation often varies from discipline to discipline, and publisher to publisher. Sometimes called a bibliographic citation or reference.
a reference or footnote to an item (such as a book or periodical); contains the author, title, date of publication, and other information needed to locate the item.
A citation includes the basic bibliographic information about an article. This includes such information as the title and author. You can conduct a search limited to the citation (indexing and abstract) of an article by choosing the Citations and Abstracts search option. An article can be viewed in this format by clicking on the Citations/Abstracts icon beside the article.
See Bibliographic citation.
A reference supplying all information needed to identify and locate a publication, including author, title, name of journal (if the citation is to an article) or publisher (if to a book), or Internet address or URL (if to a website), and date. The form of the citation depends on the style required: Modern Language Association (MLA) or American Psychological Association (APA).
1. A reference to a source of legal authority. 2. A direction to appear in court, as when a defendant is cited into court, rather than arrested.
Information about a specific work that allows you to identify and locate the work. A typical book citation provides the author and title of the book, edition information, name of the publisher, and where and when the book was published. A typical journal article citation lists the author and title of the article; the title, volume, issue, and page number of the journal the article appeared in; and the date the article appeared.
1 the quotation of an authority in legal argument; 2 a reference to the report of a case, comprising the year, an abbreviation of the relevant series of law reports, and the page number; 3 the calling before the court of a person not party to an action.
When you quote from a source, the citation identifies specifically where the quote was found.
A reference to a work, such as a book or a journal article. A citation includes the author, title, place of publication, and year of publication.
short descriptions of journal articles or book chapters. These descriptions include the author(s) names, the title of the article, the title of the journal it appeared in, the particular volume and issue, the date of that issue and the page numbers of the article. Short descriptions of the contents of the article, in abstract form and/or subject headings in a controlled vocabulary are part of the citations in an index.
citation tells readers the source for information you have included in your writing, such as your textbook, the lab manual, a reference book or an article published in a journal. A citation should guide readers to the References where the readers can find the full bibliographical information on the source.
A complete reference to a book, periodical article, or another publishing format, such as author, title, publisher, publication date, and page number. Sometimes called a reference.
A note containing all the information needed to find a copy of that item (title, author, volume number, issue number, date and pages).
Information (author, title, etc.) that helps you locate a book, an article, an essay, or other data. Citations (or references) are often listed at the ends of articles, encyclopedia entries, book chapters, or in the library's online catalog and lead you to more information.
(also known as reference, bibliographic citation) Information about any item in the library which will help you to identify and locate it. Usually includes the author, title, place of publication, publisher, and year. Volume number, pages and date will usually be included for periodical article citations. You will find citations in any database, including the catalog, as well as texts, articles, and indexes. A group of citations gathered together may be referred to as a bibliography.
The pertinent information needed to find the full text of a publication. Citations are provided in bibliographies, indexes, and the lists of references in scientific publications.
Gives credit to the original source of information being used and provides details for finding this source, e.g. citations of articles contain the author name, title, title of the source (journal, magazine, book), date, volume, and page numbers.
A reference that identifies a particular case, law review article, book, statute or other resource. Citation standards vary from state to state.
the information given in an or catalog about a particular book, magazine article, video, or other source. The citation may include the article title, periodical title, book title, place of publication, publisher, volume, pages, and date. Refer to a style manual to learn how to format citations for your own bibliographies. (Synonyms for "citation" include bibliographic citation, bibliographic entry, and reference.) EXAMPLES: BOOK: Sidel, Ruth. On Her Own: Growing Up in the Shadow of the American
Information such as author, title, pagination, and dates that identifies a book or journal
A reference to legal authority such as cases that have already been decided by a Court, statutes, or the state or federal constitution. This can also be a reference to the appendix or the transcript in the case.
Citations are found in bibliographies and indexes. A citation is a reference to a work, such as a book or a journal article - it provides the necessary information needed to locate the work. A book citation provides the author, title, publisher, publication place, and year of a work. An article citation provides author(s), article title, journal title, volume, pages, and date. Citations usually follow a particular format called a style. Example: APA and MLA.
The formal identification of a source of information used in researched writing. See Creating a Works Cited in this manual.
a note referring to a work from which a passage is quoted or to some source as authority for a statement or proposition. (ALA)
A note of reference to a work from which a passage is quoted or to some source authority for a statement or proposition. Includes information useful in locating the sources including the name of the author, title, and publication date.
An acknowledgement of information from a secondary source - a comprehensive source of referencing information is available on the Student Life website
A citation is information that identifies a book, article, conference proceeding, or other publication. Citations usually include title, author, and publication information such as place and year of publication for a book or volume, issue, pages, and date for an article.
A journal citation contains title, author, journal name, date, volume, and pages. A book citation contains title, author, publisher, place and date.
A citation is a reference to an entity. Citation: quote, mention, reference. Citation in the context of the web usually means a HREF link to a location. A Citation count is the count of references to a page on the internet. Some search engines work on the theory that pages with high citation counts are better. In reality this is about 70% true. With modern affiliate and promotion programs, citations can be generated by some sites in mass quantities.
page or section reference of a source.
information about a book or article that is used to identify or locate that book or article. A citation usually includes the author, article title, book or journal title, date, volume number, and/or publication information.
A brief description of a text (book, article, report, World Wide Web page, or other) that has been quoted, or used as an authority. A complete citation for a book includes author, title, place of publication, publisher, and year. A complete citation for a periodical or magazine article includes author and title of the article, title of the periodical, volume number, page numbers, and the dates. The elements of a complete citation for other types of publications are different. Furthermore, even for the same type of publication, the exact arrangement and formatting of a citation is dictated by a style manual. The choice of style manual depends on the discipline or subject matter. Lecturers and librarians will provide guidance to students as to which style manual to use for formatting complete citations.
a formal reference to some source as the authority for a quotations, statement, or idea. The citation usually includes information identifying a publication. A complete citation usually includes the author, title, name of the book or periodical, volume number (for articles), publisher, date of publication, etc.
Reference made by an author to a source of information they have used, for example, another author's ideas or words.
A brief description of a book, article or other work that gives enough key information on its author, title, date, publisher and page numbers so that it can be found.
the information needed to identify and locate a book or periodical article. This usually includes its author, title, and date. This information is used to compile a bibliography.
a sources identifying information: author, title, date and place of publication, and volume and page numbers.
A citation is a reference to a work, such as a book or a journal article. When you look at a bibliography or search an index, you retrieve citations. They provide the author, title, publication place, and year of a work. Often many other pieces of information, such as journal title and page number, are added in order to make it easier to locate the work.
Information which fully identifies a publication. A complete citation usually includes author, title, name of journal (if the citation is to an article) or publisher (if to a book), or Internet address or URL (if to a website), and date. The form of the citation depends on the style required: Modern Language Association (MLA) or American Psychological Association (APA).
Reference to source of legal authority. Also, writ issued by a court commanding a person to appear at a specified place and time and do something specified or to give just cause why he/she should not. Also, direction to appear in court, as when a driver receives a citation for a moving or parking violation.
Descriptive information about a source that contains the author, year of publication, volume number, page numbers, title of periodical, etc. A periodical INDEX or DATABASE will provide a list of citations. The library catalog gives a list of citations of books. Your bibliography will be a list of citations of sources you used for your paper.
Information about a particular reference source (a book or article for example) that identifies it uniquely, such as the author, title, publisher of a book or the name of the journal an article appears in, the date of publication, etc.
information that identifies a journal article, book, or web site. For a journal article, it includes the author(s), title of article, title of journal, date published, and page numbers. For a book, it includes author(s), title, date published, publisher, place of publication. Citations for web documents also include a URL and the date the information was accessed. Required for a bibliography.
A reference to a text or publication that includes the bibliographic information--author, title, name of journal or name of publisher, date, pages, volumes and other information necessary to locate a book, magazine or journal article, or some other material.
Information such as author, title, pagination, and dates which identifies an item - book, journal article, or other format. Sufficient information is included to locate the original item.
Information that identifies a particular publication. Details usually include author, title, date of publication, journal title (if applicable), volume and page numbers. Citations are sometimes called References.
the written information that identifies a book or article. A citation is the information you will need to locate the item or to include as a reference in your paper. It usually includes information such as author, title, pages, and date.
the "act of mentioning [either quoting directly or describing indirectly, in your term paper] something from a book or other source as an example or to support an argument" ( Oxford Canadian Dictionary). The word is also used interchangeably with "reference" to mean the actual parenthetical material (Author, 1999) or the foot/endnote.1
A citation is composed of author, article title, publication name, date, volume and pages from journals, magazines, books or government documents. A citation is cited in a bibliography, using a specific style manual . Author: Peters, Tom Title: Make work fun Source: Executive Excellence volume 16 no. 2, (Feb 1999): p.9 (1 page)
A citation is descriptive information about the spoken, written or printed words of another. A list of citations is the result of a search in a database or on the WWW. The citation contains all the information you need for the bibliography ie. author, year of publication, title, city of publication and publisher. Example APA style: Hanson, E.M. (1991). Educational administration and organization behavior. Boston:Allyn and Bacon
(see also quotation): n. a mentioning or quoting of something written in a book, article, etc.; also the piece of writing mentioned in support or proof. return
Complete information about a specific item. It may be a reference to a text that has been quoted, or to some source that has been used as an authority. A citation for a book includes author, title, place of publication, publisher, and year. A citation for an article in a periodical includes author, title of the article, title of the periodical, volume number, pages, and date. A single citation is sometimes called a reference. A group of citations gathered together is usually called a bibliography.
Information that identifies a book, periodical article, or other format. In a book this consists often of the title, author, publisher, and year of publication. In an article, the author and title of the article, title of the source periodical, volume and issue, date of publication and page numbers of the article.
A standardized note documenting the exact title and author of a specific information source, as well as where and when the source was published.
Citations list pieces of information that describe a periodical article or other information source. For example, an article citation typically includes the name of the author(s), title of the article, name of the magazine, journal, or information source, volume #, issue #, date and page numbers. Citations are used in bibliographies and footnotes, such as in research papers or journal articles.
A complete reference to a book or article that has all the information necessary to identify it and find it. Book citations usually include the title, author, date, publisher and publisher location. Journal citations usually include author, title, journal name, date, volume, issues and pages.
All of the pertinent information needed to identify and locate a publication, such as an article or a book.
is a reference to a book, article, or other such item. It will list such things as author, title, and date.
A citation is information that identifies a publication so that you can locate it. A citation includes information such as author, title, date, and publication information. Citations are usually listed in the bibliography or reference section at the end of a journal article, book, or Web page. When you compile a reference list for a research paper, you include the citations for the materials that you used to find your information.
A reference or footnote to a book, a magazine or journal article, or another source. It contains all the information necessary to identify and locate the work, including author, title, publisher, date, volume, issue number, and pages.
1) Surrogate's Court term for the process issued by the court to be served upon all interested parties to a proceeding (who have not waived or otherwise appeared) in order to secure jurisdiction over them in the proceeding and to give notice of the purpose of the proceeding. 2) Reference to authorities in support of any argument.
A reference to a book, article, or other source, which provides enough information to allow someone else to retrieve the source.
usually the author's last name and page number in an MLA style report; used to give credit to the source of information.
A citation is a reference source which usually includes article title, author, publication name, date, volume and pages from journals or books.
information for an article source: title, author, periodical, date, volume, page numbers
a reference to a book, passage, article, etc., where certain information may be found. A citation to a book contains the author, title of the work, publisher, date and page numbers. A citation to an article contains the author, title of the article, journal title, volume, issue, date, and page numbers. Citations to online resources generally also require information about the electronic source like the name of the database or provider, the URL and the date accessed. The form of the citation (position of data, punctuation, location within the document, etc) depends on the style being used ( APA, MLA, Chicago, Turabian, CBE, etc).
The information needed to describe and/or locate a particular book or article.
A citation is a single bibliographic entry which normally provides all the information needed for a researcher to locate the book or article to which it refers.
A reference note that includes the title, author, publisher, year, and page number of a source; both MLA and APA use this term to refer to "in-text" citations; a note used after quotations and paraphrases that gives the author, year, and page number of the source
information used to identify a book, article, or other work used in a bibliography, periodical index, or "works cited" list. A citation typically includes the author, title, place of publication, date of publication and, in the case of an article, the name of the journal or magazine, the volume, and the issue.
Information which fully identifies a publication. A complete citation usually includes author, title, name of journal (if the citation is to an article) or publisher (if to a book), and date. Often pages, volumes and other information will be included in a citation.
information about a publication (book, journal article, video, etc.) that allows someone to identify and locate that publication. Citations for books usually contain the author's name, the book's title, place of publication and date of publication. Citations for journal articles usually include the author and title of the article, the title of the journal, the volume number, page numbers and date of publication.
Information required to identify a particular text. A book citation includes author, title, publisher and year of publication while a journal citation includes author, article title and periodical title, date, volume and page numbers.
A note referring to a work from which information is quoted or alluded to.
The written information about a book or article needed to identify it. This usually includes author, title, date, journal or book title (for an article), and volume number.
The information which identifies a book or article. For a book the citation includes the author, title, date, publisher, and place of publication. For a periodical article it includes the author, the title of the article, the title of the periodical, volume, issue, pages, and date.
The complete reference to an article or book. It contains all the details required to describe a unique item, and locate it within a library collection.
A reference to a book, article, Web page, or other source that provides enough information to allow a reader to retrieve the source. Citations in a paper must be given in a standard format (such as MLA, APA, Chicago, or CSE), depending on the discipline in which the paper is written.
A reference to an authority that usually includes author, title, dates, pages.
A reference to a source of information. Citations should include sufficient information for a reader to locate a copy of the item. Pertinent information might include the author, title, and source (year, volume number, issue number, page number(s), etc. Databases are electronic indexes of citations to books, articles, etc.
Information that identifies a book, article, conference proceeding, or similar. Citations include things like source title, author, volume, issue, pages, and date.
A citation or bibliographic citation is a reference to a book, article, web page, or other published item with sufficient details uniquely to identify the item. Unpublished writings or speech, such as working papers or personal communications, are also sometimes cited. Citations are provided in scholarly works, bibliographies and indexes.