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Post by Derek Pizzuto on Jan 26, 2011 9:08:58 GMT -5
Hi Folks,
For dictionary.com, it varies from word to word. That's the tough part... but the nice thing is they do it for you! Here's what to do: 1. go to the site and find your word. 2. Go to the definition you used. Right under it, they tell you what source it came from. Note that. 3. Now click "cite this source" and scroll down - look for the source you noted in step 2. Copy and paste it.
For The Great Courses DVD lecture, we'll cite that in a way that's similar to a database article - we'll cite the lecture first, then the DVD it came from.
Armstrong, Dorsey. "The Three Orders of Medieval Society." Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN. Lecture. Medieval World. The Great Courses, 2009. DVD.
For the site by Dunnigan and Nofi (many of you used their religion article) cite it like this:
Dunnigan, James F., and Albert A. Nofi. "Medieval Society and Culture." Medieval Life and the Hundred Years War. Deno Partnership, 1994. The Hundred Years War. Strategyworld.com, 1998. Web. 3 Jan. 2011.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 22, 2013 16:50:16 GMT -5
One of my sources is an online glossary so what should I site it as?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 22, 2013 18:59:03 GMT -5
I'm using the well-known Mr. Richardson source ;D ... When you are entering the Course/Handout Date, do you enter the date it was taught to Mr. Richardson's students or the date I took notes on it? Date given to his students: 12-9-10 Date I took notes on it: 12-14-12 Thaaaaankkssss
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Post by Deleted on Jan 22, 2013 19:35:58 GMT -5
nevermind!! (I was under the Medium: Seen. Once I went to the Medium: Website., it had the spaces for the day it was electronically published as well as the day I viewed it ... If anybody else made the same mistake as me! )
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Post by Deleted on Jan 22, 2013 20:05:31 GMT -5
mehhhhh never mind again! I'll ask you in class, Mr. P
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Post by Derek Pizzuto on Jan 22, 2013 20:33:36 GMT -5
Um... ok... you confused me a bit there! Easiest way to handle a handout is to type it yourself - following the format in the packet I gave you. Easybib can be forced into a similar format, but just typing it by hand is a **lot** easier.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 23, 2013 15:51:52 GMT -5
ok. I ended up "custom formatting" the bibliography. I filled in what I could, then I hit "custom format". After that, I referred to the packet and fixed it up.
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Post by rrazd19 on Feb 13, 2015 9:00:17 GMT -5
Mr.Pizzuto, I had a question about citing the source called, Feudalism: European & Japanese, because I do not know what type of source it is. Is it a journal?
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