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  2. How to cite quote from Gutenberg Project ebook?

    academia.stackexchange.com/.../how-to-cite-quote-from-gutenberg-project-ebook

    The text isn't saying you shouldn't cite Project Gutenberg; in fact, it's saying the opposite -- that you don't need permission to cite them. Project Gutenberg even has explicit instructions for how you can cite them here. They give an example: Carroll, Lewis. (2006). Alice in Wonderland.

  3. Citing a short story within a collection within another...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/161037/citing-a-short-story-within-a...

    Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  4. How to cite a senior project in BibTeX - Academia Stack Exchange

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/47938/how-to-cite-a-senior-project-in-bibtex

    First step. When I'm not sure about citation format, I usually use Google Scholar to create it for me. BibTeX code will look similar to this: author = {Name Surname}, title = {Title}, institution = {University}, url = {URL} If your style does not have the 'url' parameter, then 'note' is usually used for this purpose.

  5. Will people translate obscure books for free? [closed]

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/186214/will-people-translate-obscure...

    Distributed Proofreaders for Project Gutenberg would in theory transcribe them, as would the French and German Wikisources, but depending on volunteer labor, it would likely take years. (Transcription on the appropriate native Wikisource is a requirement before translation on the English Wikisource.)

  6. Is it possible to be an intellectual/do research without the...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/133758/is-it-possible-to-be-an...

    And yes, I've looked on Project Gutenberg, but it only has two books, one of which was published in the 1880s, and the other in the 30s, by a guy that I know isn't 100% reliable (Edward Sapir, if you care). It feels like I can't be an intellectual anymore. Without the internet, I would just be yet another back-woods hick that didn't know ...

  7. library - Do academic libraries preserve the contents of books...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/184821/do-academic-libraries-preserve-the...

    Basically, the TL:DR of this is that doing this kind of project, even on a small scale, takes a lot of person hours. Your academic library probably has limited resources to preserve, say, older textbooks - they might reasonably argue that if the material is still covered in modern textbooks, and the book isn't of particular importance ...

  8. academic history - How did medieval universities discipline? -...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/190291/how-did-medieval-universities...

    These were introduced in the 1500s; prior to this, such punishments were for boys rather than adult men. One stricter college would put students in the stocks for fighting. loss of food. In some places, misbehaving students might get only bread and water, or may have to eat by themselves. suspension or expulsion.

  9. legal issues - Legality of downloading books from websites such...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/112509

    Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  10. How to cite an Amazon page product? - Academia Stack Exchange

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/126775/how-to-cite-an-amazon-page-product

    2. Do it like you would any other web reference with both a link and a date on which the link was accessed by you. This guards against changes that can always occur in any web resource. You can take the title from the page title. The date is essential. Share. Improve this answer.

  11. citations - Whom to cite from an article: the reporter or the...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/147326/whom-to-cite-from-an-article-the...

    @T.E.D. By "credible" I meant to say that I am not sure if the reporter has extensive experience or knowledgeable in that specific subject/field (the professor on the other hand has for sure).