Difference between revisions of "How to use the Quote template"

From Theonomy Wiki
(Marked this version for translation)
(eliminate some translation requirements)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<noinclude><languages />{{:Navup|Templates Reference|<translate><!--T:1--> Templates Reference</translate>}}</noinclude>
+
<noinclude><languages />{{:Navup|Templates Reference|{{:TemplatesReferencename/{{PAGELANGUAGE}}}}}}
 
 
<noinclude>{{:Navleft|Category:Documentation|<translate><!--T:2--> All Documentation</translate>}}</noinclude>
 
  
 +
{{:Navleft|Category:Documentation|{{:Alldocumentationname/{{PAGELANGUAGE}}}}}}</noinclude>
 
<translate><!--T:3-->
 
<translate><!--T:3-->
 
This is a template for standardizing blockquotes.
 
This is a template for standardizing blockquotes.
Line 22: Line 21:
  
 
<translate><!--T:8--> Notice that the <nowiki><ref></nowiki> tag will create an automatically numbered footnote at the bottom of the page.</translate>
 
<translate><!--T:8--> Notice that the <nowiki><ref></nowiki> tag will create an automatically numbered footnote at the bottom of the page.</translate>
 +
[[Category:Documentation]]

Latest revision as of 18:53, 14 September 2020

Other languages:
English • ‎Kiswahili • ‎español • ‎italiano • ‎português • ‎svenska • ‎íslenska • ‎հայերեն • ‎বাংলা • ‎한국어

Templates Reference

All documentation This is a template for standardizing blockquotes.

Example:

Henry van Til wrote:
{{:Quote|Culture is not something neutral, without ethical or religious connotation. Human achievement is not purposeless but seeks to achieve certain ends, which are either good or bad. Since man is a moral being, his culture cannot be a-moral. Because man is a religious being, his culture too, must be religiously oriented. There is no pure culture in the sense of being neutral religiously, or without positive or negative value ethically.<ref>Henry van Til, ''Calvinistic Concept of Culture'', 27</ref>}}

which outputs:

Henry van Til wrote:

Culture is not something neutral, without ethical or religious connotation. Human achievement is not purposeless but seeks to achieve certain ends, which are either good or bad. Since man is a moral being, his culture cannot be a-moral. Because man is a religious being, his culture too, must be religiously oriented. There is no pure culture in the sense of being neutral religiously, or without positive or negative value ethically.[1]

Notice that the <ref> tag will create an automatically numbered footnote at the bottom of the page.

  1. Henry van Til, Calvinistic Concept of Culture, 27