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bibliography

/bib-lee-og-ruh-fee/US // ˌbɪb liˈɒg rə fi //UK // (ˌbɪblɪˈɒɡrəfɪ) //

参考书目,书目,参考文献,参考资料

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural bib·li·og·ra·phies.

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

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • 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.”

  • 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.

  • Kalb makes the disclaimer in his preface that “memoirs, by definition, are not works of history — no footnotes, no bibliography.”

  • Otlet began modestly in the 1890s, creating a bibliography of sociological literature.

  • Lop off the endnotes and bibliography, and The Measure of Manhattan is barely 300 pages.

  • Tyler does not provide us with a bibliography, although his extensive notes include many books on Israel and its neighbors.

  • For full bibliography (to 1904) see Ulysse Chevalier, Rpertoire des sources hist.

  • Punctuation has been normalized for the stage directions and the play listings in the Bibliography.

  • Within six months, if you're not sandbagged or jailed on fake libel suits, you'll have a unique bibliography of swindles.

  • There is a very inadequate bibliography in the Introduction.

  • His ample bibliography leaves no point necessary for elucidation untouched.