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Gabs Posted 21 years ago
Business & Finance

Quotations - help needed !!!

0Hi everyone, 02br
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00I need some advice for the following: 02br
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001. If you quote sth by using i.e.: See Krugman (2000), pg 251, 02br
00are you just referring to the content of your source, without using the author's own words? 02br
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002. What does "supra" mean in quotations and footnotes? 02br
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00Thanks in advance! 02br
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00Gabs 0-
  

Top answer

0 Supra is Latin for above. It is used to refer to a citation that is previously mentioned. 02br 02br 00As to your first question, I guess it can be either.

  • 0 Supra is Latin for above.
  • It is used to refer to a citation that is previously mentioned.
  • 02br 02br 00As to your first question, I guess it can be either.
  • 02br 02br 00Maybe someone has a different opinion.
  • 0-
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4 Answers
0
0 Supra is Latin for above. It is used to refer to a citation that is previously mentioned. 02br
02br
00As to your first question, I guess it can be either. 02br
02br
00Maybe someone has a different opinion. 0-
0
0Hi Julielai, 02br
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00thanks for your quick answer! 02br
02br
00I thought "Idem" would be used to refer to a citation that is previously mentioned. Do you know the difference? 02br
0-
0
0 Hi Gabs, 02br
02br
00Perhaps this link may be able to help: 02br
00[url="05000"]Click here[/url] 0230hrefhttp://www.ualr.edu/~cmbarger/shortfrm.htm
0
0The site is very useful, thank you! 0-

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