You would cite the date by reproducing the copyright notice.
In the United States, a copyright notice consists of three elements::
1. the © symbol (in some cases (c) is substituted), the word "Copyright" or abbreviation "Copr.";
2. the first year of publication; and
3. the owner of the copyright, either by name, abbreviation, or other designation.
A practical example would be... © 2009 EndTrans Netwide Productions Inc.
I don't know... That's why I went to this site...
You would use the copyright date for the particular edition you referenced.
Author's Last Name. First Name. Title. Publishing Location: Publisher, Copyright Date.
no it does not mean that you have to recite it.
Last name, First name of movie director.Title. Date watched. Year published (created usually copyright year). Print.
To cite an entire website on a works cited page in MLA format, include the author (if available), the title of the website in italics, the publication or copyright date, the URL, and the date you accessed the site. In APA format, include the author, date of publication, title of the website in italics, and the URL.
Not necessarily. The release date can be well after the copyright date.
A corporate entity would not have a copyright date.
The copyright date of the original book is July 24th, 1954The copyright date of the movie is December 19th, 2001The copyright date of the video game is September 24th, 2002
The copyright date of Twilight is 2005.
In a works cited page, cite a webpage with the author's name (if available), title of the page, name of the website, publication or copyright date, URL, and the date you accessed it. For in-text citation, use the author's name (if available) or the title of the page in quotation marks.
No, a copyright date is the first date of publication and an imprint date can be many years later, e.g., a later edition based upon the original copyright date.
Each volume has its own copyright date.
the copyright date is 2005