Could you provide more context or specific details about the question or reference in order to help me give a relevant response?
To cite scholarly articles in academic writing, use the author's last name and publication year in parentheses within the text, and include a full citation in the reference list at the end of the paper. The citation should include the author's name, article title, journal name, volume, issue, page numbers, and DOI or URL if available.
Everyone is an author. You wrote a question. I wrote an answer. Anyone can be either of us and add to and edit this crazy reference tool.
Dawne Clarke has written: 'A sociological study of scholarly writing and publishing' -- subject(s): Academic writing, Scholarly publishing 'A sociological study of scholarly writing and publishing' -- subject(s): Academic writing, Scholarly publishing
Joseph A. McCaffrey has written: 'Scholarly Executions'
Christian Woll has written: 'Bibliotheken als Dienstleister im Publikationsprozess' -- subject(s): Scholarly periodicals, Scholarly publishing, Publishing, Libraries and publishing
The author of a reference can vary depending on the source. In general, the author is the individual or organization responsible for creating the content being referenced.
A scholarly book review typically includes a summary of the book's content, an analysis of its strengths and weaknesses, an evaluation of the author's arguments and evidence, and a discussion of its relevance to the field of study.
Gerry Withers has written: 'The scholarly facsimile' -- subject(s): Scolar Press
Walter Paul Zahray has written: 'Electronic dissemination of scholarly journals'
If the author of a work is unknown, you would begin the reference entry with the title of the work in place of the author's name.
Quote (a passage, book, or author) as evidence for or justification of an argument or statement, esp. in a scholarly work
When an author quotes another author, it is typically considered as using a "source" or a "reference." When you don't cite your source/reference accurately or not at all, it's called "plagiarism."