If there is more than one work by the same author then list the title of the article by alphabetical order.
e.i: Hirsch, Tim. "Deforestation in the Amazon." World Watch 26. (Feb 2007): 22-28
EBSCOhost. 24 Feb 2010.
Hirsch, Tim. "The Disappearing Amazon Rainforest." World Watch 23. (Dec 2009):
31-33. EBSCOhost. 26 Jan 2010.
This is a little tricky.
It goes: Last name of first author, First name of first author. First name of second author, last name of second author. Then repeat the "second" author format for the rest of the authors.
Sequential lineupsand more reliable than traditional lineups.
Polyphonic, where there is melody in more than one line at the same time.
You can easily find the author for a BCC article by looking at the article's byline. In some cases, there are multiple bylines, which means that there is more than one author.
Multitasking
multiprogrammed batch system can run more than one program at the same time.-L
You may include more than the author's last name and page number when providing a direct quotation that does not fit within the main body of your text and needs to be highlighted or if you are citing from a source without page numbers, like a website, where additional information is needed to locate the specific section of the source.
You can use the format "as cited in" to cite a quote by an author referenced in the work of another author in APA style. For example: (Smith, 2010, as cited in Jones, 2019). In your reference list, you would list the source you have read (Jones, 2019) rather than the original source (Smith, 2010).
there is no ''famous auther''in japan.there is more than one.like the one who created naruto or inuyasha.they arnt the same.
When an author has written more than one source, you can differentiate between them by including a short title or date within the in-text citation. For example, (Author, "Title," Year) or (Author, Source1, Year). This helps to distinguish between the different sources by the same author.
it's MLA.
At the basic levels of meaning you could say yes - but really what a poet does is far more complex and difficult than what an author does. A poet deserves the distinction of being a word-smith, an author -- not so much.
"Writing without citing" is worst than overcitation, or even under-citation. But too much citation would undermine your own research, and perhaps, it is a bigger sin to mis-cite; say, you are citing about someone who didn't say what you have penned down. Or, similarly, miscitation or wrongful citation about a phrase which you have written, you have by mistake wrongly cited someone (the author who never said or meant anything like that) what you have written, and then wrongfully cited him or her. Which means, you just passed down your own thoughts as others claiming deceitful evidence or credits. It is also better to search for similarities of your own ideas coinciding with others who have penned down any such before you, even if that is your own though. Not citing such means, you are the first one to think and get the idea which exist but you never would have been cared. This is blatant overlook and hence-unintentional plagiarism. This is opposite intentional lazy work- of not citing the original source as because you have not properly search for the references. Hence, perhaps, overcitation is better than misscitation or not at all.
its the same like there are more words than letters and combo is more than none
Yes: x+5 is the same as 5+x
Nothing more than means no more than, the same as, a maximum of, simply, merely, nothing but.
10 more than 10 is the same as 10 + 10, which is 20.
No. But the copies of the same program can be executed on the same time on more than one computers.