J.D. Salinger
World Book Encyclopedia Writer's Handbook Who's Who
(Attack of the Robot Accountant 214) would be the correct parenthetical citation for citing multiple works by the same author.
In an in-text citation that links to an entry in your works cited page, you would typically need to include the author's last name and the page number (if applicable) of the source you are referencing.
There is no special treatment for an anonymous author in a works cited page. You would still go in alphabetical order.
Yes, in an MLA works cited page, entries are arranged by the author's last name in alphabetical order. If the source doesn't have an author, you would use the title of the work to determine the placement in the list.
World Book Encyclopedia Writer's Handbook Who's Who
For a veterinarian publishing a scientific article, there would not be a Works Cited page - you use a Works Cited page in MLA formatting, but most veterinary publications are written in APA format, which simply has a references section at the end. The list of references would be based upon the article being written. For a Works Cited page for a paper about being a veterinarian, one decent reference (although electronic) would be www dot avma dot org - this is the home page for the AVMA (American Veterinary Medical Association). There is a section of this website that lists what a veterinarian does, what kind of training they need and other useful basic facts about the practice of veterinary medicine.
A Works Cited is basicly the same as a credits, or sources part in a paper or something were you use information thats not yours. For example, You copy a paragraph from Wikipedia, and use it as a quote, you would put the place were you got that information in your works cited.
A works cited page typically appears at the end of an essay, listing all the sources and references used in the paper. It is a separate page that provides detailed information about each source cited in the essay.
If you use an author's specific words, those words must be in quotation marks, and the source must be cited. If you write about an author's ideas in your own words, the source must still be cited.
If you use an author's specific words, those words must be in quotation marks, and the source must be cited. If you write about an author's ideas in your own words, the source must still be cited.
The information that must be included in a bibliography or a works-cited list are the author's name, title of the article, publication date, and other publication details.