bibliography / ˌbɪb liˈɒg rə fi /

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bibliography 的定义

n. 名词 noun

plural bib·li·og·ra·phies.

  1. a complete or selective list of works compiled upon some common principle, as authorship, subject, place of publication, or printer.
  2. a list of source materials that are used or consulted in the preparation of a work or that are referred to in the text.
  3. a branch of library science dealing with the history, physical description, comparison, and classification of books and other works.

bibliography 近义词

bibliography

等同于 card catalog

bibliography 的近义词 4

更多bibliography例句

  1. He’s toyed with Collatz for about fifty years and become keeper of the knowledge, compiling annotated bibliographies and editing a book on the subject, “The Ultimate Challenge.”
  2. Some readers might prefer more background science for each question — for a book that aims to crush pseudoscience, a bibliography or at least footnotes would have been useful.
  3. Kalb makes the disclaimer in his preface that “memoirs, by definition, are not works of history — no footnotes, no bibliography.”
  4. Otlet began modestly in the 1890s, creating a bibliography of sociological literature.
  5. Lop off the endnotes and bibliography, and The Measure of Manhattan is barely 300 pages.
  6. Tyler does not provide us with a bibliography, although his extensive notes include many books on Israel and its neighbors.
  7. For full bibliography (to 1904) see Ulysse Chevalier, Rpertoire des sources hist.
  8. Punctuation has been normalized for the stage directions and the play listings in the Bibliography.
  9. Within six months, if you're not sandbagged or jailed on fake libel suits, you'll have a unique bibliography of swindles.
  10. There is a very inadequate bibliography in the Introduction.
  11. His ample bibliography leaves no point necessary for elucidation untouched.