No. The International Standard Book Number is a 10- or 13-digit commercial identifier. The copyright date is a 4-digit year.
Assuming tha you mean book 1- 'Artemis Fowl,' the copyright date is 2001, as stated in the book.
It can mean that either the book was published in 1905 or that the original story was copyrighted in 1905 and published at a later date.
The copyright date is the date the material was "fixed." This can mean when it was written down, recorded, painted, etc.
Knowing a textbook's copyright date helps readers understand how current the information in the book is. A more recent copyright date indicates that the content has been updated to reflect the latest information or research in the field. Conversely, an older copyright date may mean that the information in the textbook is outdated.
2010.
The copyright of a book is the right to control its reproduction. copyrigh exists from the time the book is rendered into permanent forn (printed, typed, or hand written manuscript) and lasts for 70 years after the death of the author. (It is slightly differed in the case of a work written for rihe. The copyright date of a book can mean one of two things. It can refer to the first date of publication, especially in the case of a book written as "work-for-hire". It could also refer to the date of creation, particularly in a first edition.
A copyright year in a book (usually in the first few pages right next to a c with a circle around it shows the date of publication. Hope this helps. It's the first question Ive tried to answer :)
I don't think there is such a thing as a copyright date for the entire series; rather, each individual book is copyrighted. The first book was published in the UK on 26 June 1997. I guess that (1997) would be the copyright year, for the first book.
The letters are Roman numerals that stand for the number (hence the copyright year) 1950.
Those numbers are typically the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) which uniquely identifies a specific edition of a book. The ISBN helps in cataloging and tracking books, making it easier for libraries, bookstores, and readers to identify a specific publication.
Typically the earliest date will be the copyright date of the original work, and the latest date will be the copyright of the particular edition you have. If the notification is not completely clear, the cataloging-in-publication information should help.For example, I am looking at Kohn on Music Licensing, 4th edition. The notification is © 1992-2010. This would mean that the first edition came out in 1992, and the work is consistently being revised. However the CIP data for this physical book gives the Library of Congress classification as KF3035.K64 2000, which means this 4th edition book was first published in 2000. Going back to the original notification of © 1992-2010, I would expect that this particular copy was printed in 2010.For the purposes of a bibliography, I would give the date of this 4th edition book as 2000. For the purpose of determining copyright status, the copyright and publication dates are immaterial: it will be protected for the life of the authors plus 70 years.
A set of letters or numbers on the copyright page generally refers to the number of the printing or edition of the book.