Double dates are the lifetime of the person, for example Egbert Hoffenauer (1789- 1833). A single date indicates when the person did whatever it was. For example "Barkely (1964) shows that the relationship..." means that Barkely's experimental results showing the relationship were published in 1964.
The text in the brackets must be a question.
Brackets are punctuation marks used in pairs to set apart or interject text within other text. In the United States, "bracket" sometimes refers specifically to the square or box type.There are four main types of brackets:round brackets, open brackets or parentheses: ( )square brackets, closed brackets or box brackets: [ ]curly brackets, squiggly brackets, swirly brackets, braces, or chicken lips: { }angle brackets, diamond brackets, cone brackets or chevrons: < > or ⟨ ⟩
Functions have a name followed by brackets. So when you have a name followed immediately by brackets, it is a function. On the worksheet it would also have an equals in front of it. In a module it would have the keyword Function in front of it.
An angle bracket is either of a set of brackets, ? and ?, used to enclose text, or one of the inequality signs, < or >, when used as brackets, such as in HTML.
Square brackets are used for citations in formal pieces of text. Instead of using normal brackets, the square brackets signal something that has been added in after publishing.
In a citation within the text, the journal name appears in italics followed by the volume number, issue number in brackets, page numbers, and publication year. In the reference list at the end of the document, the journal name is also in italics, followed by the volume number, issue number in brackets, page numbers, and publication year.
brackets
The quote has been changed from its original text
because it makes text comprehensive and easy to read.
To cite three authors in APA in-text, include all authors' last names the first time you cite the source, followed by the publication year. For subsequent citations, use the first author's last name followed by "et al." and the publication year.
Italics in brackets are often used to denote a change or emphasis added by the person quoting the text, rather than a part of the original quote. This helps distinguish the modifications made by the quoter from the original text.
Angle brackets (< and >) are used to separate meta tags from text in HTML documents. Meta tags provide information about the HTML document, such as the character set, author, and description. Placing them within angle brackets distinguishes them from regular text content on the page.