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

From Theonomy Wiki
(Created page with "Come utilizzare il modello "Quote" ")
(Created page with "Questo è un modello per standardizzare le citazioni in blocco. ")
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
{{:Navleft|Category:Documentation|{{:AllDocumentationname/{{PAGELANGUAGE}}}}}}</noinclude>
 
{{:Navleft|Category:Documentation|{{:AllDocumentationname/{{PAGELANGUAGE}}}}}}</noinclude>
This is a template for standardizing blockquotes.
+
Questo è un modello per standardizzare le citazioni in blocco.
  
 
Esempio:
 
Esempio:

Revision as of 18:47, 14 September 2020

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

Riferimento ai modelli

[[:Special:MyLanguage/Category:Documentation| AllDocumentationname/it]] Questo è un modello per standardizzare le citazioni in blocco.

Esempio:

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>}}

che produce:

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