Then you know every patient will experience varying results from every medication they try. But the majority of drugs are compounds that target specific areas.
I also used to like http://www.citethisforme.com/ when I was at school.
The only problem with these is that they don't keep things in sync in your word document so you have to copy/paste a lot between them
Well, if you're looking at it as one long file (a single-page HTML version, for example), then there are technically no page numbers to cite.
But if you're looking at the epub version, then you may want to look at a resource like this for aid with citing the version you're using: http://www.citethisforme.com/guides/harvard/how-to-cite-a-ebook
Absolute life saver. I can't believe how many students still write out refernces. Sure, it's a good skill to have and everyone should know how to do it. But who has the patience to actually do them all manually? Sod that.
I'm not to familiar with Harvard, as I use MLA with footnotes, but this article will be your best shot. http://www.citethisforme.com/harvard-referencing
TBH as long as it consistent throughout and readable, you will be okay. Harvard uses an in-text citation for when you make the reference
"After that I lived like a young rajah in all the capitals of Europe…" (Fitzgerald, 2004).
And then has a reference list at the end with the full citation
Fitzgerald, F. (2004). The great Gatsby. New York: Scribner.
Does this help? I can try and provide some more assistance if needed?
ISBN. A standard inclusion in source citation.
That is of course unless you don't know how to actually cite a legitimate record. Or if your sources are just, yaknow, made up.
So how is the book inaccurate again?
I don't think you'll get Word to do that. (What the hell is so great about Vancouver?!? Why not make life easy and use one of the installed styles?) Anyway, some Googling found this: http://www.citethisforme.com/vancouver
You're on your own from here, kiddo. (hey, and well-raised humans upvote folks who answer their reddit questions...)
Ah I only discovered Cite This For Me right at the end of my course. No installing programs, just search for your book or whatever and it gives you a reference and in-text citation that you can copy and paste into your work.
I don't know if it works with your reference style but they all basically look the same so you might be able to blag it. The only two differences I see between your referencing style and Harvard APA are the year (one is in brackets), and that Harvard includes the edition number (or whatever) in brackets.
To be honest I think they're all pretty rubbish systems. Tonnes of unnecessary punctuation, stickler lecturers will mark you down if you misplace a comma or don't italicise something, and without having to check, I have no idea what "30(1), 53" is meant to be. Why not write "Volume x, ed. x, issue x"? Then you can at least tell at a glance what it is
Sorry, before I did not notice on your Behance page that you live in Bulgaria. If your target audience is your professor and mum, then you would use the EU Interinstitutional Style Guide instead.
Here's how to format a citation for websites
go here http://www.citethisforme.com/
It cites it for you. You just put in the info of the website where you got the gif. Use the picture type under the "More" option
Good point about needing scans of both - always need to be one step ahead of whatever trick WT chooses to play!
ISBN might be useful, but I had meant academic style references (e.g. Harvard http://www.citethisforme.com/harvard-referencing or any other convention). They usually include the city and or publisher for books, the article title, volume and issue number and pages span for magazine or journal articles.
e.g. the for the first Lewontin evolution article: Lewontin, Richard C. “Adaptation.” Scientific American, vol. 239, no. 3, 1978, pp. 212–231., www.jstor.org/stable/24955807.
It might help using BibTeX as it automatically format references for LaTeX and lots of journal publications offer a directly exportable reference in this format.
If it hasn't already been mentioned, citethisforme is an excellent website for citing and arranging sources for academic writing - particularly in the UK you can set the website to automatically reference to your universities specifications - it also covers every format for reference material and pretty much every style you can possibly want.
For those who have classes that have lots of essay type assignments. This website was an absolute godsend at times because referencing is just a downright slog but its necessary, couple it with a quick visit to the lecturer a few days before the deadline to make sure your citations/references are fine and life's good.
Also first year spread is a real thing, you have no idea how horribly drained you are going to be most of the time and guaranteed the easiest food to get will be junk food. Just be sure to balance things out and make time for physical training or activities!!!!
There's a reason most people you know in school get fat during their first year of Uni/college. You don't want to be one of them.
Cite this for me.
“Automatically create website citations in the APA, MLA, Chicago, or Harvard referencing styles at the click of a button. Simply browse to the page you wish to cite and click the button to generate a correctly formatted citation. Then copy-and-paste the citation into your assignment, or add it to your online bibliography for safe keeping until later.
You can also add other sources (like books, journals, and newspapers) from our main tool at http://www.citethisforme.com”
https://student.unsw.edu.au/how-do-i-cite-electronic-sources
http://www.citethisforme.com/guides/harvard/how-to-cite-a-website
I know you do something like the above but I'm wondering is the fact that someone might have republished these things online possibly without the right to do so make citing them dodgy?
By following your style guide, using a free online tool, or talking to your professor.
Do you have a more specific question that isn't covered by your style guide? The online resources are fairly detailed.
Everyone in University/College should know about; http://www.citethisforme.com it generates references just from a title and can reference just about everything. Saved me so much time when writing my dissertation.