¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Citations
1. citation [n] - See also: citation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Citations
Literary usage of Citations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Brief Making and the Use of Law Books by William Minor Lile, Nathan Abbott, James Everett Wheeler, Henry Stephen Redfield (1905)
"Citations. As lawyers are constantly referring to decided cases and citing them
as authority, reference to the reports is almost invariably made by an ..."
2. The Science of Jurisprudence: A Treatise in which the Growth of Positive Law by Hannis Taylor (1908)
"The next important step in the work of codification is represented by the Law of
Citations of Valentinian III., issued from Ravenna in the year 426, ..."
3. The Birds of North and Middle America: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Higher by Robert Ridgway (1907)
"Page 555: To citations of Empidonax virescens add: NEHRUNG, Our Native Birds, ii,
... Page 572: To citations of Empidonax canescens add: MILLER (WD), Bull. ..."
4. Journal of Theological Studies (1905)
"THE ORIGEN-Citations IN CRAMER'S CATENA ON I CORINTHIANS. IT has long been
recognized that the text of many portions of Cramer's Catenae Graecorum ..."
5. When the Victim Is a Child by Debra Whitcomb (1992)
"Tables of Statutory Citations TABLE 1: TABLE 2: TABLE 3: TABLE 4: TABLE 5: TABLE
6: TABLE 7: TABLE 8: TABLE 9: TABLE 10: TABLES OF STATUTORY Citations ..."
6. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne (1913)
"The numerous citations from Hesychius in catena; of the Psalms and the exegetical
works on the Psalms handed down over his name, particularly in Oxford and ..."
7. Richard Henry Dana: A Biography by Charles Francis Adams (1891)
"Direct and positive proof, as to where the second annotator found his citations
or as to how far he traced them back, is not attainable. ..."