User:Encycloshave/citations
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Monty Python
[edit]Logan, Brian (4 August 2003). "Ce perroquet est mort: Monty Python in French? Brian Logan meets the team behind a world first". The Times. London. p. 18. {{cite news}}
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Accessed through ProQuest http://search.proquest.com/news/docview/246028389/135346FB80A35F1532C/1?accountid=31191, 1 March 2012
"Mind you, there's been a little tinkering with the scripts, says Renoux. The Python's song Sit on my Face has evolved into Cum in my Mouth. Renoux is full of respect for the Python's "irreverence" and claims that "Cum in my Mouth is the next step. This is what they would have written today. And they really laughed when they saw how we'd translated that song." "
Examples
[edit]Flotsam
[edit]Stuff, stuff, and lots of more stuff.[1]
Jetsam
[edit]Oh so much stuff. There is so much stuff, it's astounding!.[2] [3]
Ratification
[edit]The document could not become officially effective until it was ratified by all 13 colonies. The first state to ratify was Virginia on December 16, 1777.[4]
Dates of ratification are given as follows in American Constitutions[5]:
Folklore
[edit]References
[edit]- Francis J. Child Ballads A Complete List
- Folklorist
- The Traditional Ballad Index
- Child's Ballads
- Talk:Child's Ballads Child's Ballads is sourced from http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/index.htm, which is formatted a bit questionably. Sacred-texts.com does not break them down into the eight separate volumes, hence neither does Wikisource. Rather, it appears as a single-volume book.
Notes
[edit]Francis Child
[edit]English and Scottish Popular Ballads: Edited from the Collection of Francis James Child. Ed. Helen Child Sargent and George Lyman Kittredge. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1904. http://www.archive.org/details/englishscottishp1904chil "'Love Robbie,' Christie's Traditional Ballad Airs, I, 136, from the recitation of an old woman in Bucke, Enzie, Banffshire." p. 206
William Christie
[edit]From Christie. William Christie. Traditional ballad airs, Volume 1. Edinburgh: Edmonston & Douglas, 88 Princes Street, 1876. http://books.google.com/ebooks?id=SowwAQAAIAAJ The ballad is sung on the Pentatonic scale, "noted in 1850 from the singing of the old woman in note p.42." The ballad was "written from her recitation. In another instance of a ballad found sung different from the way it is published. As far as Christie could tell, the ballad was sung "by the old woman's father and grandfather; and, if so, it may thus be traced to the middle of the last century [i.e. 18th cent.]. Mr. Buchan gives a version of the ballad, "Brown Robyn and Mally," II, 299, which has not the final catastrophe here given. In his note II, 346, he says, -- 'My informant says,-- Robert Steward was the real name of Brown Robyn, the bird that sang so sweetly in the orchard, and was gardener to the lady's father, a gentleman of great fortune on the banks of the Tweed.' &c. &c." p. 136
same, p.42. The woman was "in Buckie, (Enzie, Banffshire,)...She died in the year 1866 at the age of nearly 80 years. Her father, long resident in Buckie, where fisherman and labourers have 'tee-names' had the 'sobriquet' --"Meesic' (Music)--given to him in the end of last century by the populace, thus indicating his fame as a ballad-singer."
Citation templates
[edit]{{cite book | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = | publisher = | series = | volume = | edition = | date = | location = | pages = | language = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = | mr = | zbl = | jfm = }}
{{cite book | last = Christie | first = William | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Traditional ballad airs, Volume 1 | publisher = Edmonston & Douglas | series = | volume = | edition = | date = 1876 | location = Edinburgh | pages = 136 | language = English | url = http://books.google.com/ebooks?id=SowwAQAAIAAJ | doi = 14 February 2012}}
References
[edit]- ^ Elliot, Jonathan (1836). The debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution, as recommended by the general convention at Philadelphia in 1787: together with the journal of the Federal convention, Luther Martin's letter, Yates' minutes, Congressional opinions, Virginia & Kentucky resolution of '98-'99 and other illustrations of the Constitution. Vol. 1 (2 ed.). Washington, D.C.: Editor on the Pennsylvania Avenue. p. 98. Retrieved February 21, 2012. Mallory, John (1917). United States compiled statutes, annotated, 1916: embracing the statutes of the United States of a general and permanent nature in force at the close of the first session of the 64th Congress and decisions construing and applying same to April 1, 1916, incorporating under the headings of the revised statutes the subsequent laws, together with explanatory and historical notes. Vol. 10. St. Paul: West Publishing Company. pp. 13044–5. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
- ^ Elliot, Jonathan (1836). The debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution. Vol. 1 (2 ed.). Washington, D.C.: Editor on the Pennsylvania Avenue. p. 98. Retrieved February 21, 2012.
- ^ Mallory, John (1917). United States compiled statutes. Vol. 10. St. Paul: West Publishing Company. pp. 13044–5. Retrieved February 21, 2012.
- ^ "Articles of Confederation, 1777–1781". U.S. Department of State. Retrieved February 21, 2012. Elliot, Jonathan (1836). The debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution. Vol. 1 (2 ed.). Washington, D.C.: Editor on the Pennsylvania Avenue. p. 98. Retrieved February 21, 2012. Mallory, John (1917). United States compiled statutes. Vol. 10. St. Paul: West Publishing Company. pp. 13044–5. Retrieved February 21, 2012.
- ^ Hough, Franklin Benjamin (1872). American Constitutions. Albany: Weed, Parsons, & Company. p. 10. References to a 1778 Virginia ratification are based on an error in the Journals of Congress: "The published Journals of Congress print this enabling act of the Virginia assembly under date of Dec. 15, 1778. This error has come from the MS. vol. 9 (History of Confederation), p. 123, Papers of the Continental Congress, Library of Congress." Dyer, Albion M. (2008) [1911], First Ownership of Ohio Lands, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, p. 10 The original is found here [http://www.archive.org/details/newenglandhisto63unkngoog The New England historical and genealogical register (1874) ].