Oh, those! They're...uh...on the other bookshelf. Yeah, that's it!Originally posted by: Atomicus
that is nothing.
where are the texts for differential equations? fluid mechanics?
Originally posted by: Atomicus
that is nothing.
where are the texts for differential equations? fluid mechanics?
Originally posted by: jumpr
Oh, those! They're...uh...on the other bookshelf. Yeah, that's it!Originally posted by: Atomicus
that is nothing.
where are the texts for differential equations? fluid mechanics?
Originally posted by: KLin
<Ferris>
I did have a test today. That wasn't bullshit. It's on European socialism. I mean, really, what's the point? I'm not European, I don't plan on being European, so who gives a crap if they're socialist? They could be fascist anarchists - that still wouldn't change the fact that I don't own a car.
</Ferris>
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: jumpr
Oh, those! They're...uh...on the other bookshelf. Yeah, that's it!Originally posted by: Atomicus
that is nothing.
where are the texts for differential equations? fluid mechanics?
Damn liberal arts majors...I bet you don't even know what those are?
j/kinf
I'm writing a paper and using MLA style.Originally posted by: loki8481
what's with the MLA handbook? that's an easily removeable book from the stack
(unless you're quoting the book itself for research or something)
Originally posted by: jumpr
I'm writing a paper and using MLA style.Originally posted by: loki8481
what's with the MLA handbook? that's an easily removeable book from the stack
(unless you're quoting the book itself for research or something)
Well, I'm also citing journal articles (I love the U of M's library system; I don't even have to go there to get .pdfs of them), and some notes from class. Plus, I always like to have the style manual on hand for capitalization issues, etc.Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: jumpr
I'm writing a paper and using MLA style.Originally posted by: loki8481
what's with the MLA handbook? that's an easily removeable book from the stack
(unless you're quoting the book itself for research or something)
yeah, you need a handbook to do that? in that case, you only have yourself to blame![]()
Political science. But I've NEVER had a teacher say we had to use any style format exclusively. All they ask is that citations be clear and consistent. I prefer MLA style over Chicago or APA, so that's what I use.Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
You must be liberal arts, no one uses MLA outside of that.
Originally posted by: Atomicus
that is nothing.
where are the texts for differential equations? fluid mechanics? structural analysis?
