The list of references. glossary.
General Rules of the list of references
What is Glossary?
How to make a glossary
An example of a glossary
DEADLINE FOR THE LIST OF REFERNCES AND GLOSSARY: 10 MARCH 2020 22.00 send to g-indira@mail.ru
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The list of references and glossary

1. The list of references. glossary.

THE LIST OF
REFERENCES.
GLOSSARY.

2. General Rules of the list of references

■ Arnold, I. The English Word. – Moscow, 1986.
■ Ashcroft, B., Griffiths, G., Tifin H. The Empire writes back: Theory and Practice
in Post-colonial literature. – London, 1990.
■ Harman, G. Cognitive science? // The making of cognitive sciencе: Essays in
honour of George Miller. – Cambridge, 1988. – P. 256 – 260.
■ Brians, P. Postcolonial literature: problems with the terms /
http://public.wsu.edu/~brians/anglophone/postcolonial.html
■ Cambridge dictionary / http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british
■ Философский энциклопедический словарь. – М., 2007.
■ Булыко, А.Н. Большой словарь иностранных слов. 2-е изд. – М., 2008.
■ Эриксон, Э.Х. Идентичность: юность и кризис: Учебное пособие. – М.,
2006.

3. What is Glossary?

■ Glossary
- an alphabetical list, with meanings, of the words or phrases in a text that
are difficult to understand:
■ a glossary of technical terms
(https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/glossary)
A glossary is a list of terms that traditionally appears at the end of an academic
paper, a thesis, a book, or an article and includes terms within that book that are
either newly introduced, uncommon, or specialized.
The glossary should contain definitions for terms in the main text that may be
unfamiliar or unclear to the average reader.

4. How to make a glossary

To write a glossary, you will first need to identify the terms in your main text that will need to
go into the glossary.
Then, you can create definitions for these terms and make sure the formatting of the
glossary is correct so it is polished and easy to read.
■ Read over the main text for unfamiliar terms.
You may underline technical or academic terms that may need to be further explained in
more detail outside of the main text.
■ Collect the terms for the glossary.
Collect all the terms together in one document.
Make sure the terms listed cover any concepts or ideas that may be unfamiliar to an average
reader.
■ Try not to have too many terms in the glossary, as it may not be useful if it covers too
much.

5.

■ After collecting the terms, write out a definition for each term.
■ Don’t forget to make the list of references to the dictionaries you have used.
■ Make sure the definitions are clear.
■ Do not use abbreviations in the glossary.
Abbreviations should go in a separate list called “List of Abbreviations.”
■ Put the terms in alphabetical order.
For example, in the “A” section of the glossary, “Apple” will appear before
“Arrange,” as “p” appears before “r” in the alphabet.

6.

■ Format the glossary. Italicize or bold the terms in the glossary.
This can make the terms stand out from the definitions and make them easier to
spot in the text.
■ Place the glossary (and the list of abbreviation) after the main text of your
presentation, but before the list of references
For detail reading: https://www.wikihow.com/Write-a-Glossary

7. An example of a glossary

■ https://fccid.io/JEH7730GAI/User-Manual/Manual-Glossary-144939
■ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlRZsY8pMkI - how to make glossary

8. DEADLINE FOR THE LIST OF REFERNCES AND GLOSSARY: 10 MARCH 2020 22.00 send to [email protected]

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