Citation (disambiguation)
A citation is a credit or reference to another document or source.
Look up citation, citable, cite, cited, or citing in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Citation may also refer to:
Government, law, and military
- Citation (police), a type of summons compelling the appearance of a defendant before the local magistrate
- Traffic citation, a notice issued to a motorist accusing violation of traffic laws
- Case citation, the system used in common law countries to uniquely identify the location of past court cases
- Legal citation, the style of crediting and referencing other documents or sources of authority in legal writing
- Unit citation, a formal, honorary mention of a military unit's outstanding performance
- Law of Citations, a Roman law issued from Ravenna in AD 426
- Citation Star, a US Department of War personal valor decoration
Transportation
- Chevrolet Citation, an automobile
- Edsel Citation, an automobile
- Cessna Citation, a series of business jets produced by Cessna Aircraft Company
- Citation Boulevard, a four-lane divided highway in Lexington, Kentucky
Other uses
- Citation (album), a 2006 album by Scott Miller
- Citation (horse) (1945–1970), a Thoroughbred champion race horse
- Gibson Citation, a guitar
- Citation Race Cars, an automobile manufacturer involved in US Formula 1000 Championship racing
gollark: Apparently whoever is doing the projectile thing is making a simple vaguely coilgun-type thing. I have no idea if it will actually work as they explained it.
gollark: Does it doing combustion count as *on* fire?
gollark: There would be significant legal issues and also quite likely damage to the box.
gollark: Maybe you would be better off using quantum field theory. Except that doesn't have gravity/general relativity, only special relativity, so you should work out how to unify those?
gollark: We can just say in the technical and artistic merit video that "the robot's projectile trajectory handling maths has relativistic corrections in it and would thus be equipped to fire projectiles near the speed of light, if we actually needed that, had a way to accelerate things that fast, could do so without destroying everything, did not have interactions with the air to worry about, and could safely ignore quantum effects".
See also
- Cite (disambiguation)
- CIT (disambiguation)
- Citation index, a bibliographic database indexing citations between publications
- All pages with titles containing citation
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.