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?
Originally posted by: SWScorch
My Night