Find your pincite by locating the starred numbers immediately before and after the relevant text; the number immediately before the text is the page number where the text appears in the hard-copy reporter. If the opinion appears in multiple reporters, then you can expect to encounter multiple sets of starred numbers.
Find your pincite by locating the starred numbers immediately before and after the relevant text; the number immediately before the text is the page number where the text appears in the hard-copy reporter. If the opinion appears in multiple reporters, then you can expect to encounter multiple sets of starred numbers.
In a legal brief, a lawyer might use a pinpoint citation to refer to a specific page in a case that supports their argument. When citing a case, a pinpoint citation might look like this: "Smith v. Jones, 123 F. 3d 456, 459 (5th Cir.
A pincite may consist of a page range or multiple pages that are not consecutive. To cite a footnote, give the page on which the footnote appears, “n.,” and the footnote number, with no space between “n.” and the number. Example 1: Green v. Georgia, 442 U.S. 95, 97.
As a general rule, spell out the numbers zero to ninety-nine in text and footnotes; for larger numbers, use numerals. The following exceptions apply to the afore-referenced general rule. Any number that begins a sentence must be spelled out.
A good rule is to write as much intelligent prose as possible in the time provided. In practice, this means that you should be able to write a good solid paragraph (say, 200-250 words) which should fill one page in your Blue Book. Be clear about this: Several sentences will not do, no matter how brilliant and concise.
Find a database with a citation index: Web of Science, Google Scholar, Academic Search Complete, ScienceDirect, and Scopus all include citation indexes. Carry out the citation search: Use the title or author's name to search for citations in the database.
As a general rule, spell out the numbers zero to ninety-nine in text and footnotes; for larger numbers, use numerals. The following exceptions apply to the afore-referenced general rule. Any number that begins a sentence must be spelled out.
A good rule is to write as much intelligent prose as possible in the time provided. In practice, this means that you should be able to write a good solid paragraph (say, 200-250 words) which should fill one page in your Blue Book. Be clear about this: Several sentences will not do, no matter how brilliant and concise.