Does “Op. cit.” stand for “opus citatum” or “opere citato”?Representing medieval latin...
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Does “Op. cit.” stand for “opus citatum” or “opere citato”?
Representing medieval latin abbreviation symbols in UnicodeA medieval scribal abbreviation missing from Unicode?English adjective derived from Latin for “per equal amount of datapoints”What does J.S.J.P. stand for?Is the usage of “id est” in Latin exactly like the usage of “i.e.” or “that is” in English?What does “Scat.” stands for in Latin?Medieval abbreviation for gens [actually, igitur]What does “in eod.” stand for?Etymology of “salarium” and its connection to salt
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Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary says "opere citato"
American Heritage Dictionary, Collins and Oxford (at Lexico.com) say "opere citato"
Merriam Webster Dictionary has an entry for "opus citatum" and says that it's abbreviated "op cit".
Wikipedia says that "Op. cit." is an abbreviation for "opus citatum", with no mention of "opere citato".
abbreviations english
New contributor
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Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary says "opere citato"
American Heritage Dictionary, Collins and Oxford (at Lexico.com) say "opere citato"
Merriam Webster Dictionary has an entry for "opus citatum" and says that it's abbreviated "op cit".
Wikipedia says that "Op. cit." is an abbreviation for "opus citatum", with no mention of "opere citato".
abbreviations english
New contributor
Both might be correct, since "opus citatum" is accusative and "opere citato" is ablative, or "cited work" vs "the work cited". I would like others to weigh in on this, though, because I'm very much a beginner!
– Adam
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary says "opere citato"
American Heritage Dictionary, Collins and Oxford (at Lexico.com) say "opere citato"
Merriam Webster Dictionary has an entry for "opus citatum" and says that it's abbreviated "op cit".
Wikipedia says that "Op. cit." is an abbreviation for "opus citatum", with no mention of "opere citato".
abbreviations english
New contributor
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary says "opere citato"
American Heritage Dictionary, Collins and Oxford (at Lexico.com) say "opere citato"
Merriam Webster Dictionary has an entry for "opus citatum" and says that it's abbreviated "op cit".
Wikipedia says that "Op. cit." is an abbreviation for "opus citatum", with no mention of "opere citato".
abbreviations english
abbreviations english
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 8 hours ago
ZebrafishZebrafish
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Both might be correct, since "opus citatum" is accusative and "opere citato" is ablative, or "cited work" vs "the work cited". I would like others to weigh in on this, though, because I'm very much a beginner!
– Adam
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
Both might be correct, since "opus citatum" is accusative and "opere citato" is ablative, or "cited work" vs "the work cited". I would like others to weigh in on this, though, because I'm very much a beginner!
– Adam
8 hours ago
Both might be correct, since "opus citatum" is accusative and "opere citato" is ablative, or "cited work" vs "the work cited". I would like others to weigh in on this, though, because I'm very much a beginner!
– Adam
8 hours ago
Both might be correct, since "opus citatum" is accusative and "opere citato" is ablative, or "cited work" vs "the work cited". I would like others to weigh in on this, though, because I'm very much a beginner!
– Adam
8 hours ago
add a comment
|
2 Answers
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Both, or either!
Opus citātum and opere citātō are different inflections of the same phrase, depending how they're used in the sentence.
If something comes from the cited work, for example, that would be ab opere citātō.
If you want a reader to look at the cited work, on the other hand, that would be vidē opus citātum.
In isolation (or in this case as an abbreviation for a longer phrase), either would be correct; the distinction doesn't end up mattering.
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It depends on context, I would say. Opere citato would mean "from the cited work" or "in the cited work" in the most relevant contexts. Opus citatum would mean "the cited work", where it could be subject or object or possibly something else. Operis citati would mean "of the cited work".
If it is a Latin text, the phrase would be expected to follow ordinary Latin rules of inflexion. If you see it in e.g. an English text, it would depend on the sentence; can you replace it with "in the cited work" or "from the cited work"? Then it should stand for opere citato. Would you rather replace it with "the cited work" without a preposition, when you're making it fit in the English sentence? Then it should stand for opus citatum. This is also the base form of the word (the nominative). And "of the cited work" corresponds to operis citati.
But it's ultimately not extremely important: as long as it's abbreviated, they all look the same. And it's not often easy to tell which form would fit best.
Examples:
In a footnote: Aristotle, op. cit. [opus citatum, as the base form probably fits best, but I'd say opere citato could work as well]
This is similar to a passage from chapter VII op. cit. [here operis citati would probably fit best, but a case can be made for opere citato]
The theory is mentioned in op. cit. as well [since we can't have "in in", nor "in of", a plain opus citatum would make the most sense; but I suspect some people might object to this usage altogether, with the English praeposition]
Examples can be found everywhere op. cit. [opere citato would fit best here, but this is perhaps a bit contrived]
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2 Answers
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Both, or either!
Opus citātum and opere citātō are different inflections of the same phrase, depending how they're used in the sentence.
If something comes from the cited work, for example, that would be ab opere citātō.
If you want a reader to look at the cited work, on the other hand, that would be vidē opus citātum.
In isolation (or in this case as an abbreviation for a longer phrase), either would be correct; the distinction doesn't end up mattering.
add a comment
|
Both, or either!
Opus citātum and opere citātō are different inflections of the same phrase, depending how they're used in the sentence.
If something comes from the cited work, for example, that would be ab opere citātō.
If you want a reader to look at the cited work, on the other hand, that would be vidē opus citātum.
In isolation (or in this case as an abbreviation for a longer phrase), either would be correct; the distinction doesn't end up mattering.
add a comment
|
Both, or either!
Opus citātum and opere citātō are different inflections of the same phrase, depending how they're used in the sentence.
If something comes from the cited work, for example, that would be ab opere citātō.
If you want a reader to look at the cited work, on the other hand, that would be vidē opus citātum.
In isolation (or in this case as an abbreviation for a longer phrase), either would be correct; the distinction doesn't end up mattering.
Both, or either!
Opus citātum and opere citātō are different inflections of the same phrase, depending how they're used in the sentence.
If something comes from the cited work, for example, that would be ab opere citātō.
If you want a reader to look at the cited work, on the other hand, that would be vidē opus citātum.
In isolation (or in this case as an abbreviation for a longer phrase), either would be correct; the distinction doesn't end up mattering.
answered 5 hours ago
DraconisDraconis
25.9k2 gold badges34 silver badges113 bronze badges
25.9k2 gold badges34 silver badges113 bronze badges
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It depends on context, I would say. Opere citato would mean "from the cited work" or "in the cited work" in the most relevant contexts. Opus citatum would mean "the cited work", where it could be subject or object or possibly something else. Operis citati would mean "of the cited work".
If it is a Latin text, the phrase would be expected to follow ordinary Latin rules of inflexion. If you see it in e.g. an English text, it would depend on the sentence; can you replace it with "in the cited work" or "from the cited work"? Then it should stand for opere citato. Would you rather replace it with "the cited work" without a preposition, when you're making it fit in the English sentence? Then it should stand for opus citatum. This is also the base form of the word (the nominative). And "of the cited work" corresponds to operis citati.
But it's ultimately not extremely important: as long as it's abbreviated, they all look the same. And it's not often easy to tell which form would fit best.
Examples:
In a footnote: Aristotle, op. cit. [opus citatum, as the base form probably fits best, but I'd say opere citato could work as well]
This is similar to a passage from chapter VII op. cit. [here operis citati would probably fit best, but a case can be made for opere citato]
The theory is mentioned in op. cit. as well [since we can't have "in in", nor "in of", a plain opus citatum would make the most sense; but I suspect some people might object to this usage altogether, with the English praeposition]
Examples can be found everywhere op. cit. [opere citato would fit best here, but this is perhaps a bit contrived]
add a comment
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It depends on context, I would say. Opere citato would mean "from the cited work" or "in the cited work" in the most relevant contexts. Opus citatum would mean "the cited work", where it could be subject or object or possibly something else. Operis citati would mean "of the cited work".
If it is a Latin text, the phrase would be expected to follow ordinary Latin rules of inflexion. If you see it in e.g. an English text, it would depend on the sentence; can you replace it with "in the cited work" or "from the cited work"? Then it should stand for opere citato. Would you rather replace it with "the cited work" without a preposition, when you're making it fit in the English sentence? Then it should stand for opus citatum. This is also the base form of the word (the nominative). And "of the cited work" corresponds to operis citati.
But it's ultimately not extremely important: as long as it's abbreviated, they all look the same. And it's not often easy to tell which form would fit best.
Examples:
In a footnote: Aristotle, op. cit. [opus citatum, as the base form probably fits best, but I'd say opere citato could work as well]
This is similar to a passage from chapter VII op. cit. [here operis citati would probably fit best, but a case can be made for opere citato]
The theory is mentioned in op. cit. as well [since we can't have "in in", nor "in of", a plain opus citatum would make the most sense; but I suspect some people might object to this usage altogether, with the English praeposition]
Examples can be found everywhere op. cit. [opere citato would fit best here, but this is perhaps a bit contrived]
add a comment
|
It depends on context, I would say. Opere citato would mean "from the cited work" or "in the cited work" in the most relevant contexts. Opus citatum would mean "the cited work", where it could be subject or object or possibly something else. Operis citati would mean "of the cited work".
If it is a Latin text, the phrase would be expected to follow ordinary Latin rules of inflexion. If you see it in e.g. an English text, it would depend on the sentence; can you replace it with "in the cited work" or "from the cited work"? Then it should stand for opere citato. Would you rather replace it with "the cited work" without a preposition, when you're making it fit in the English sentence? Then it should stand for opus citatum. This is also the base form of the word (the nominative). And "of the cited work" corresponds to operis citati.
But it's ultimately not extremely important: as long as it's abbreviated, they all look the same. And it's not often easy to tell which form would fit best.
Examples:
In a footnote: Aristotle, op. cit. [opus citatum, as the base form probably fits best, but I'd say opere citato could work as well]
This is similar to a passage from chapter VII op. cit. [here operis citati would probably fit best, but a case can be made for opere citato]
The theory is mentioned in op. cit. as well [since we can't have "in in", nor "in of", a plain opus citatum would make the most sense; but I suspect some people might object to this usage altogether, with the English praeposition]
Examples can be found everywhere op. cit. [opere citato would fit best here, but this is perhaps a bit contrived]
It depends on context, I would say. Opere citato would mean "from the cited work" or "in the cited work" in the most relevant contexts. Opus citatum would mean "the cited work", where it could be subject or object or possibly something else. Operis citati would mean "of the cited work".
If it is a Latin text, the phrase would be expected to follow ordinary Latin rules of inflexion. If you see it in e.g. an English text, it would depend on the sentence; can you replace it with "in the cited work" or "from the cited work"? Then it should stand for opere citato. Would you rather replace it with "the cited work" without a preposition, when you're making it fit in the English sentence? Then it should stand for opus citatum. This is also the base form of the word (the nominative). And "of the cited work" corresponds to operis citati.
But it's ultimately not extremely important: as long as it's abbreviated, they all look the same. And it's not often easy to tell which form would fit best.
Examples:
In a footnote: Aristotle, op. cit. [opus citatum, as the base form probably fits best, but I'd say opere citato could work as well]
This is similar to a passage from chapter VII op. cit. [here operis citati would probably fit best, but a case can be made for opere citato]
The theory is mentioned in op. cit. as well [since we can't have "in in", nor "in of", a plain opus citatum would make the most sense; but I suspect some people might object to this usage altogether, with the English praeposition]
Examples can be found everywhere op. cit. [opere citato would fit best here, but this is perhaps a bit contrived]
answered 2 hours ago
Cerberus♦Cerberus
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Zebrafish is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Both might be correct, since "opus citatum" is accusative and "opere citato" is ablative, or "cited work" vs "the work cited". I would like others to weigh in on this, though, because I'm very much a beginner!
– Adam
8 hours ago