Any person who writes using their own ideas and words has "authored" that text. The only difference between every person who writes and one called an "author" is an author typically has had their work published and claims to practice the profession of being an Author. However, some "authored" texts, e.g. written words, are published deliberately without a stated Author (published anonymously).
The synonym(s) of author's purpose is/are "maybe": author's goal, author's accomplishment and purpose of an author.
Books are by an author, from a publisher.
affiliation of the author means to what institution is related to the author
the author is not real
The author was Homer.
an author and an actor. =] an author and an actor. =] an author and an actor. =] an author and an actor. =] an author and an actor. =] an author and an actor. =] an author and an actor. =]
The synonym(s) of author's purpose is/are "maybe": author's goal, author's accomplishment and purpose of an author.
No, the corresponding author is not necessarily the first author.
Books are by an author, from a publisher.
An author's purpose could be his intent or goal.
Author's is the singular possessive of author.
Author's is the singular possessive of author.
A published author who has a Goodreads account and has joined the author program by claiming their author profile.
Are you the author of this missive? I would like to be an author. "Author" is a difficult word to use in a sentence. In Russia, it is eay to be sentenced for being an author. It takes six letters to spell "author".
Author Author - 1915 was released on: USA: 25 December 1915
The author is American
In APA style, when referencing Author B in Author A's work, you would cite Author B's work as a secondary source. In the reference list, you would include Author B's work as the source you consulted. In the text, you would cite Author A and indicate that you are referring to information from Author B. For example, "According to Author B (as cited in Author A, year), ...".