author: The name of the author of the journal article quoted. Use either author, or last and first (for the first name, and middle names or initials), not both.
last: The name of the author of the journal article quoted. Use either author, or last and first (for the first name, and middle names or initials), not both.
first: The name of the author of the journal article quoted. Use either author, or last and first (for the first name, and middle names or initials), not both.
coauthors: The names of the coauthor(s) of the journal article. Separate multiple names with semicolons.
editor: The name of the editor of the journal.
editors: The names of the editors of the journal. Separate multiple names with semicolons.
title: Mandatory: the title of the journal article.
url: The URL or web address of an external website containing the full text of the journal article. Do not link to any website that has content in breach of copyright.
archiveurl: Use archiveurl and archivedate (which must be used together) to indicate the URL or web address of a webpage on a website such as the Internet Archive or Perma.cc at which the webpage has been archived, and the date on which the webpage was archived.
archivedate: "
accessdate: Alternatively, if the webpage cannot be archived, use accessdate to indicate when its URL was accessed. (If the webpage has been archived, it is unnecessary to use this parameter.)
journal: The name of the journal. In addition to `journal` or `work`, `magazine`, `newspaper` or `periodical` can also be used.
work: The name of the journal. In addition to `journal` or `work`, `magazine`, `newspaper` or `periodical` can also be used.
magazine: The name of the journal. In addition to `journal` or `work`, `magazine`, `newspaper` or `periodical` can also be used.
newspaper: The name of the journal. In addition to `journal` or `work`, `magazine`, `newspaper` or `periodical` can also be used.
periodical: The name of the journal. In addition to `journal` or `work`, `magazine`, `newspaper` or `periodical` can also be used.
location: The location where or, more specifically, the city in which the journal was published. If more than one location is stated, separate the locations with semicolons, like this: "London; New York, N.Y.".
publisher: The name of one or more publishers of the journal article. If more than one publisher is stated, separate the names with semicolons.
date: The date that the journal article was published. Use either date, or year (and month), not both.
year: The year (and month), that the journal article was published. Use either date, or year (and month), not both.
month: The year (and month), that the journal article was published. Use either date, or year (and month), not both.
volume: The volume number of the journal. TODO: Use volume_plain if you wish to suppress the word volume appearing in front of the volume number and identify the volume in some other way (for example, "journal II").
page: The page number or range of page numbers of the journal article. Use `page` to indicate a single page, and `pages` to indicate a range of pages. For example, "pages=1–2" will display "pages 1–2". Use an en dash to separate the page numbers in the range.
pages: The page number or range of page numbers of the journal article. Use `page` to indicate a single page, and `pages` to indicate a range of pages. For example, "pages=1–2" will display "pages 1–2". Use an en dash to separate the page numbers in the range.
passage: The portion of the journal article being quoted. The defined term will be highlighted in bold in the passage quoted like this: "'''humanities'''".
term: The defined term to be highlighed in the passage.
Click "Build it" to display the quotation, then copy it, click the link and edit that page.