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John Doe1 says blah. Doe2 says blah. Doe3 says blah. Doe4 says blah.
In a note.5 A citation group.6 Another one.7 And another one in a note.8 Citation with a suffix and locator.9 Citation with suffix only.10
Now some modifiers.11
Doe, John, ‘Article’, Journal of Generic Studies, 6 (2006), 33–34.
---, First Book (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).
Doe, John, and Jenny Roe, ‘Why Water Is Wet’, in Third Book, ed by Sam Smith (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).
First Book (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005). ↩
First Book, p. 30. ↩
First Book, p. 30, with suffix. ↩
First Book; ‘Article’, Journal of Generic Studies, 6 (2006), 33–34 (p. 30); see also John Doe and Jenny Roe, ‘Why Water Is Wet’, in Third Book, ed by Sam Smith (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007). ↩
A citation without locators Doe and Roe. ↩
See Doe, First Book, pp. 34–35; also Doe and Roe, chap. 3. ↩
See Doe, First Book, pp. 34–35. ↩
Some citations see Doe, Article, 33–34 (chap. 3); Doe and Roe; Doe, First Book. ↩
Doe, First Book, pp. 33, 35–37, and nowhere else. ↩
Doe, First Book, and nowhere else. ↩
Like a citation without author: First Book, and now Doe with a locator Article, 33–34 (p. 44). ↩