What does (s.d.) stand for in literature cited section of a paper.
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I think it is reference to a date. I know that (n.d.) means "no date".
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I think it is reference to a date. I know that (n.d.) means "no date".
abbreviations
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The Latin for ‘without’ is sine – does that help?
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
Do you have an example or context? Or perhaps which citation style is being used? I've seen it used to mean variously: sans date (no date), same date, and several dates, in reference to a cited work.
– Dmann
9 hours ago
1
Dennis, we would normally be looking for more detail in a question (see How to Ask), and the system flags short questions as potentially low-quality, to be considered for deletion. At the very least, you could edit your question to include an example so we have some context. However, I'm voting not to delete, as this is not an easy abbreviation to search the meaning for online (Free Dictionary lists 190 options!). I think a formal answer might be a useful addition to the EL&U library. :-)
– Chappo
8 hours ago
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I think it is reference to a date. I know that (n.d.) means "no date".
abbreviations
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I think it is reference to a date. I know that (n.d.) means "no date".
abbreviations
abbreviations
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New contributor
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asked 9 hours ago
Dennis Riecke
1
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The Latin for ‘without’ is sine – does that help?
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
Do you have an example or context? Or perhaps which citation style is being used? I've seen it used to mean variously: sans date (no date), same date, and several dates, in reference to a cited work.
– Dmann
9 hours ago
1
Dennis, we would normally be looking for more detail in a question (see How to Ask), and the system flags short questions as potentially low-quality, to be considered for deletion. At the very least, you could edit your question to include an example so we have some context. However, I'm voting not to delete, as this is not an easy abbreviation to search the meaning for online (Free Dictionary lists 190 options!). I think a formal answer might be a useful addition to the EL&U library. :-)
– Chappo
8 hours ago
add a comment |
The Latin for ‘without’ is sine – does that help?
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
Do you have an example or context? Or perhaps which citation style is being used? I've seen it used to mean variously: sans date (no date), same date, and several dates, in reference to a cited work.
– Dmann
9 hours ago
1
Dennis, we would normally be looking for more detail in a question (see How to Ask), and the system flags short questions as potentially low-quality, to be considered for deletion. At the very least, you could edit your question to include an example so we have some context. However, I'm voting not to delete, as this is not an easy abbreviation to search the meaning for online (Free Dictionary lists 190 options!). I think a formal answer might be a useful addition to the EL&U library. :-)
– Chappo
8 hours ago
The Latin for ‘without’ is sine – does that help?
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
The Latin for ‘without’ is sine – does that help?
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
Do you have an example or context? Or perhaps which citation style is being used? I've seen it used to mean variously: sans date (no date), same date, and several dates, in reference to a cited work.
– Dmann
9 hours ago
Do you have an example or context? Or perhaps which citation style is being used? I've seen it used to mean variously: sans date (no date), same date, and several dates, in reference to a cited work.
– Dmann
9 hours ago
1
1
Dennis, we would normally be looking for more detail in a question (see How to Ask), and the system flags short questions as potentially low-quality, to be considered for deletion. At the very least, you could edit your question to include an example so we have some context. However, I'm voting not to delete, as this is not an easy abbreviation to search the meaning for online (Free Dictionary lists 190 options!). I think a formal answer might be a useful addition to the EL&U library. :-)
– Chappo
8 hours ago
Dennis, we would normally be looking for more detail in a question (see How to Ask), and the system flags short questions as potentially low-quality, to be considered for deletion. At the very least, you could edit your question to include an example so we have some context. However, I'm voting not to delete, as this is not an easy abbreviation to search the meaning for online (Free Dictionary lists 190 options!). I think a formal answer might be a useful addition to the EL&U library. :-)
– Chappo
8 hours ago
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1 Answer
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According to the free dictionary, s.d. can defined as:
s.d. or sine die - without a day fixed [literally: without a day]
In the context of literature citation s.d. and n.d. has the same meaning.
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1 Answer
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According to the free dictionary, s.d. can defined as:
s.d. or sine die - without a day fixed [literally: without a day]
In the context of literature citation s.d. and n.d. has the same meaning.
add a comment |
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According to the free dictionary, s.d. can defined as:
s.d. or sine die - without a day fixed [literally: without a day]
In the context of literature citation s.d. and n.d. has the same meaning.
add a comment |
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up vote
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According to the free dictionary, s.d. can defined as:
s.d. or sine die - without a day fixed [literally: without a day]
In the context of literature citation s.d. and n.d. has the same meaning.
According to the free dictionary, s.d. can defined as:
s.d. or sine die - without a day fixed [literally: without a day]
In the context of literature citation s.d. and n.d. has the same meaning.
answered 1 hour ago
3kstc
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Dennis Riecke is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dennis Riecke is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dennis Riecke is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dennis Riecke is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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The Latin for ‘without’ is sine – does that help?
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
9 hours ago
Do you have an example or context? Or perhaps which citation style is being used? I've seen it used to mean variously: sans date (no date), same date, and several dates, in reference to a cited work.
– Dmann
9 hours ago
1
Dennis, we would normally be looking for more detail in a question (see How to Ask), and the system flags short questions as potentially low-quality, to be considered for deletion. At the very least, you could edit your question to include an example so we have some context. However, I'm voting not to delete, as this is not an easy abbreviation to search the meaning for online (Free Dictionary lists 190 options!). I think a formal answer might be a useful addition to the EL&U library. :-)
– Chappo
8 hours ago