Citations:anonymus
Appearance
English citations of anonymusses and anonymuses
- 1646, John Bellamie, A Vindication of the Humble Remonstrance and Petition of the Lord Major, Aldermen, and Commons, of the City of London, in Common-councell Assembled, Presented to Both Houses of Parliament, the 26 of May, 1646, full main title:
- A Vindication of the Humble Remonstrance and Petition of the Lord Major, Aldermen, and Commons, of the City of London, in Common-councell Assembled, Presented to Both Houses of Parliament, the 26 of May, 1646: or, An Answer to Two Late Libels Published by Two Anonymusses, Against the Said Remonstrance: The One Intituled, A Modest Reply to the City Remonstrance. The Other Called, The Interest of England Maintained. Wherein Many Falsehoods in Those Two Pamphlets are Discovered; Absurdities Manifested; and the Truth in the Remonstrance Justified.
- 1972, John P. Riebel, How to Write Reports, Papers, Theses, Articles (second edition), Arco, →ISBN (10), →ISBN (13), page 8:
- Besides, a series of “anonymuses” in a bibliography or table of references means absolutely nothing. It’s the title that counts.