24 adjectives to describe citation

SEE Shepard's Georgia citations. <pb id='288.png' /> Shepard's New York Supreme Court and statutory citations.

The following citations will show him the scope and parts which have commonly been assigned to our syntax: "The construction of sentences depends principally upon the concord or agreement, and the regimen or government, of words.

Bibliographical citation in the social sciences: a handbook of style.

A Practical manual of standard legal citations.

SHEPARD'S NEW YORK SUPPLEMENT CITATIONS.

Shepard's New York miscellaneous citations.

In Maurice Sand's standard work on Italian comedy, Masques et Bouffons (Paris, 1860) there will be found copious citations from this pantomime, the popularity of which he attributes wholly to Gherardi.

To these questions I shall furnish direct answers, which the reader may compare with such as he can derive from the foregoing citation: the last two sentences of which Murray ought to have credited to Dr. Lowth; for he copied them literally, except that he says, "the adverbs more AND most," for the Doctor's phrase, "the adverbs more OR most."

Incorrect citations to other texts (Burton seems to quote by memory and sometimes gets it wrong) have not been changed if they are wrong in both editions.

As an evidence of the respect paid to his opinions by publicists, the fact may be pointed out that Wheaton, in the first edition of his "Elements of International Law," makes 150 judicial citations, of which 105 are English and 45 American, the latter being mostly Marshall's.

This work contains many literal citations of and references to foreign words, sounds, and alphabetic symbols drawn from many languages, including Gothic and Phoenician, but chiefly Latin and Greek.

All grammatical or syntactical matter, unless of a difficult or peculiar character, has been omitted, while the literary citations that abound will, it is hoped, stimulate the student to do further reading and to make literary comparisons of his own.

" What Oxford thinker would dare to print such naïf and provincial-sounding citations of authority to-day?

But his learning appears in his poetry only in the form of a fine and chastened result, and not in laborious allusion and pedantic citation, as too often in Ben Jonson, for instance.

Such citations of passages remarkable for thought or for expression might be indefinitely extended, but we have space for only one more, in which the Friar attacks the vices of the Roman court with an energy that brings to mind the invectives of the greatest of his contemporaries.

" Surely the force of apt citation can no further go.

Therefore I do not think it necessary to load this chapter with voluminous citations.

Mr. Talmadge of Connecticut supported the provision of death with a biblical citation; and Mr. Smilie said he considered it the very marrow of the bill.

The question is not so much about a principle demonstrable by definite citations as about an unconscious motive in Spinoza's thinking.

" The whole paper is too long for extensive citation here, but is well worth reading.

He then gives a familiar citation from Browne's "Vulgar Errors."

An illustration of the possible good results of concealing an unpleasant fact from a sick person, that has been a favorite citation all along the centuries with writers on ethics who would justify emergency falsehoods, is one which is given in his correspondence by Pliny the younger, eighteen centuries ago.

The garbled citation is now much oftener read than the original.

''Twas this vain idolizing of authors,' Glanvill had just before observed, 'which gave birth to that silly vanity of impertinent citations, and inducing authority in things neither requiring nor deserving it.'

24 adjectives to describe  citation