I wouldn't think you needed to Cite it because it is what is known at a common fact.
It means tools for plants
To cite a constitution in academic writing, follow this format: Title of Constitution, Article or Amendment Number (if applicable), Section Number (if applicable) (Year of Ratification). For example, "United States Constitution, Article I, Section 8 (1787)."
You simply say that you used the information from the constitution and what insection u got the info from.... well that's what I would do.
YES. Islamic State profess to be fundamentalist (Salafi) Sunni Muslims and they cite chapter and verse for their actions. This does not mean that Islamic State is a good representative of what most Sunni Muslims believe.
McCulloch v. Maryland
He used the Necessary and Proper Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Islamic State profess to be fundamentalist (Salafi) Sunni Muslims and they cite chapter and verse for their actions. This does not mean that Islamic State is a good representative of what most Sunni Muslims believe.
Go to the Purdue online writing lab, they have varieties of styles that you can cite your sources. There's also a conversion program in Microsoft word where you just enter your sources in any format and Word automatically formats it for you.
The Eighth Amendment to the US Constitution.
constitutions and other obvious and well known sources do not go into a bibliography, they just need footnotes or in text references as for footnotes just write: US Constitution, Art. 3 (or some variation of this)
The author cited the presence of libraries, universities, paved roads, street lighting, and public baths in Cordova as evidence of the high level of Islamic civilization and scholarship. These institutions and infrastructures were indicative of a thriving intellectual and cultural hub during the Islamic Golden Age.