Jump to content

Plagiarism: Difference between revisions

1,394 bytes removed ,  11 years ago
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
=Clarence Larkin=


=Clarence Larkin=


The Gates to the “Soul” are “Imagination,” “Conscience,” “Memory,” “Reason” and the “Affections.” (Larkin, C. 1921. Rightly Dividing the Word (88). Clarence Larkin: Philadelphia, PA)


We must not forget that the “SEVENTH SEAL” includes all that happens during the sounding of the “Trumpets,” and the pouring out of the “Vials,” and so extends down to the '''ushering in of the Millennium.''' (Larkin, C. 1919. The Book of Revelation: A Study of the Last Prophetic Book of Holy Scripture (68). Rev. Clarence Larkin Estate: Philadelphia, PA)
We must not forget that the “SEVENTH SEAL” includes all that happens during the sounding of the “Trumpets,” and the pouring out of the “Vials,” and so extends down to the '''ushering in of the Millennium.''' (Larkin, C. 1919. The Book of Revelation: A Study of the Last Prophetic Book of Holy Scripture (68). Rev. Clarence Larkin Estate: Philadelphia, PA)
Line 16: Line 15:




== [[w:wikitext|Wikitext]] markup -- making your page look the way you want==
:'''''This is page [[Help:Wiki markup examples]], transcluded in [[Help:Editing]].'''''
<!-- This is the part everybody wants, therefore transcluded and not just linked.-->
*If you want to try out things without danger of doing any harm, you can do so in the [[{{ns:4}}:Sandbox]].
*More information on [[Help:Html in wikitext|HTML tags in wikitext]]
=== Organizing your writing -- sections, paragraphs, lists and lines ===
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
|-
|-
!What it looks like
!What William Branham Said
!What you type
!Plagiarized Source
|-
|-
|
|Now, you must not misinterpret the Word. You say, "Well, I believe It means this." It means just what It says. It needs no interpreter. And you must not misplace the Word. And you must not dislocate the Word. And if we would do either of these, it throws the whole Bible in a confusion and in a chaos. (Christ is Revealed in His Own Word, August 22, 1965)
;Sections and subsections
|There are three things that we must avoid in the handling of God’s Word.
Start sections with header lines
 
Note: Single equal signs give the highest level heading, like the page title; usually projects have the convention not to use them.
 
<!-- This is the original
= DO NOT USE THIS =
== New section ==
=== Subsection ===
==== Sub-subsection ====
-->
 
<!-- next set
<h1> DO NOT USE THIS </h1>
<h2> New section </h2>
<h3> Subsection </h3>
<h4> Sub-subsection </h4>
-->
 
<!-- This code prevents confusion in the section editing feature-->
<b><font style="font-size:120%"> New section </font></b>
 
<b><font style="font-size:110%"> Subsection</font></b>
 
<b><font style="font-size:100%"> Sub-subsection</font></b>
 
*Start with a second-level heading (<tt><nowiki>==</nowiki></tt>); don't use first-level headings (=).
*Don't skip levels (for example, second-level followed by fourth-level).
*A [[#Table of contents|table of contents]] will automatically be added to an article that has four or more sections.
*If appropriate, place subsections in an appropriate order. If listing countries, for example, place them in alphabetical order rather than, say, relative to population of [[w:OECD|OECD]] countries, or some random order.
*If you want to keep headings out of the TOC you have to use HTML heading tags and close them without using a slash e.g. <nowiki><h4>heading too low level to be in the toc of large page<h4></nowiki>.
|<pre><nowiki>
 
== New section ==
 
=== Subsection ===


==== Sub-subsection ====
:1.      The Misinterpretation of Scripture.
</nowiki></pre>
:2.      The Misapplication of Scripture.
:3.      The Dislocation of Scripture.


(Larkin, C. 1918. Dispensational Truth, or “God’s Plan and Purpose in the Ages“)
|-
|-
|
|
;[[w:newline|Newline]]:
The Gates to the “Soul” are “Imagination,” “Conscience,” “Memory,” “Reason” and the “Affections.” (Larkin, C. 1921. Rightly Dividing the Word (88). Clarence Larkin: Philadelphia, PA)
 
A single
newline
has no
effect on the
layout.


But an empty line
But an empty line