[XeTeX] BibTeX and LSA style
Alan Munn
amunn at msu.edu
Wed Mar 25 22:54:12 CET 2009
At 4:28 AM -0700 3/25/09, Arash Zeini wrote:
>Hello,
>
>My question has only partially to do with XeTeX. I am asking it here
>because I feel there are many linguists and philologists on this
>list, who might be able to help me.
>
>I would like to know if anyone uses the LSA style for generating
>bibliographies and how this is being done. A description of the LSA
>system can be found here:
>
>http://linguistlist.org/pubs/tocs/JournalUnifiedStyleSheet2007.pdf
This query is probably more appropriate for the ling-tex mailing
list. <http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~dag/ling-tex.html>
Here's a recent message from that list which has what you need: -Alan
At 6:22 PM -0400 3/14/09, Kai von Fintel wrote:
>On Mar 14, 2009, at 4:23 PM, David J Iannucci wrote:
>
>>I'm writing an MA thesis using LaTeX, trying to use bibtex, and want to
>>find an easy way to get it to format in LSA style (or close).
>
>If you mean the new unified stylesheet for linguistics as described at
>
><http://www.lsadc.org/info/style-sheet.cfm>
>
>and downloadable at
>
><http://linguistlist.org/pubs/tocs/JournalUnifiedStyleSheet2007.pdf>,
>
>then might I recommend sp.bst, the bibtex stylesheet for the
>LSA-supported open-access journal Semantics & Pragmatics
>(<http://semprag.org>), downloadable at
>
><http://semantics-online.org/sp/sp-latex.zip>.
>
>We tried to stick as close as possible to the unified stylesheet
>(modulo disagreeing with them about the alphabetization of names
>like "van Gelderen" or "von Fintel").
--
Alan Munn amunn at msu.edu
Department of Linguistics
and Germanic, Slavic, Asian and African Languages Tel.
517-355-7491
Michigan State University, East Lansing MI 48824 USA Fax 517-432-2736
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