The columbia encyclopedia sixth edition online


















Welcome How Do I Cite? Titles Capitalize the first letter of the first word of the title of the entry and the title of the encyclopedia or dictionary. You do not need to put a period after a DOI number. If you accessed the encyclopedia or dictionary through a website, provide the url instead. In-Text Citation - No Author If a dictionary or encyclopedia entry has no author, the in-text citation should include the title of the entry. Here are some options if you have no page numbers and you are quoting directly: If paragraph numbers are given, use that number where you'd normally put the page number with the word "para.

This example refers to the third paragraph in the entry If you have no paragraph numbers, but the entry has section headings, you can use those. Formatting Note : All citations should be double spaced and have a hanging indent in a Reference List. Example Carruthers, E. Example Landscape gardening. Retrieved from url Example Beckwith, J. Retrieved from url Example Acetone.

Wikipedia Title of entry. Example Veterinary medicine. Example: "Veterinary Medicine," n. In-Text Quote "Title of entry", n. Paragraph Number Example: "Veterinary Medicine," n. Example King, P. Example Crop circles. Page Number Example: "Crop Circles," , p.

Tags: APA. In-Text Paraphrase. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W. Roosevelt, T. Stein, G. Stevenson, R. Wells, H. Wells, H. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. The conventional religions of both Greeks and Romans were alike in consisting principally of propitiation and prayers for the good of the city-state, the tribe, or the family, and only secondarily of the person.

Individuals sought a more emotional religion that would fulfill their desires for personal salvation and immortality. Secret societies were formed, usually headed by a priest or a hierophant. By the 5th cent. Although the mystic rites were kept secret, it was known that they required elaborate initiations, including purification rites, beholding sacred objects, accepting occult knowledge, and acting out a sacred drama.

Some mysteries were of foreign origin, such as the Middle Eastern cults of Cybele, Isis, and Mithra; some were embodied survivals of indigenous rites. Archive of searchable scholarly articles, available in several languages.

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