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Chomsky(1957: 23) showed that natural language cannot be gen erated by a finite-state Markov process "Natural language cannot be generated by a finite-state Markov Markov processes are not powerful enough to generate natural language(Chomsky 1957: 23) Some scientists prefer to cite sources by number(1,[2, etc. ) rather than by name and date. I dont like this because it makes it hard to recognize authors. Chomsky is Chomsky wherever you meet him; if he is 24] in one paper and [35 in the next, you may never be aware of his identity The reference list at the end of your paper tells what the names and dates refer to. It lists only the sources that are actually cited in the tert; it is NOT a list of everything you looked at while preparing the paper Here are guidelines for the content of reference lists Everything has an author, date published, and information about where to find it. Even the most unusual sources can be cited if you keep this in mind Authors'names are given as in the original source but with the last first Titles of books(in English) are capitalized like sentences Titles of series and of journals(in English)have every important word capitalized. An"important word"is one that can be spoken with full stress In German, all nouns are capitalized. In most other languages, titles are capitalized like sentences Always give complete numbers(e.g, 401-420, not 401-20) 8 What to cite Cite all ideas or facts that can be obtained from only one source, or that reflect the opinion of one person, whether or not you are quoting the author's exact words. If you quote exact words, use quotation marlChomsky (1957:23) showed that natural language cannot be gen￾erated by a finite-state Markov process. “Natural language cannot be generated by a finite-state Markov process” (Chomsky 1957:23). Markov processes are not powerful enough to generate natural language (Chomsky 1957:23). Some scientists prefer to cite sources by number ([1], [2], etc.) rather than by name and date. I don’t like this because it makes it hard to recognize authors. Chomsky is Chomsky wherever you meet him; if he is [24] in one paper and [35] in the next, you may never be aware of his identity. The reference list at the end of your paper tells what the names and dates refer to. It lists only the sources that are actually cited in the text; it is NOT a list of everything you looked at while preparing the paper. Here are guidelines for the content of reference lists: • Everything has an author, date published, and information about where to find it. Even the most unusual sources can be cited if you keep this in mind. • Authors’ names are given as in the original source, but with the last name first. • Titles of books (in English) are capitalized like sentences. • Titles of series and of journals (in English) have every important word capitalized. An “important word” is one that can be spoken with full stress. • In German, all nouns are capitalized. In most other languages, titles are capitalized like sentences. • Always give complete numbers (e.g., 401–420, not 401–20). 8 What to cite Cite all ideas or facts that can be obtained from only one source, or that reflect the opinion of one person, whether or not you are quoting the author’s exact words. If you quote exact words, use quotation marks. 7
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