Template:RQ:Boyle Works/documentation

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Documentation for Template:RQ:Boyle Works. [edit]
This page contains usage information, categories, interwiki links and other content describing the template.

Usage

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This template may be used in Wiktionary entries to format quotations from a collection of Robert Boyle's works entitled The Works of the Honourable Robert Boyle (1st edition, 1744, 5 volumes). It can be used to create a link to online versions of the work at Google Books:

If a specific quotation template exists (for example, {{RQ:Boyle Air}}), use it instead of this template.

Parameters

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The template takes the following parameters:

  • |1= or |volume=mandatory: the volume number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, from |volume=I to |volume=V.
  • |2= or |title=mandatory: the title of the work quoted from. If quoting from one of the titles indicated in the second column of the following table, give the parameter the value indicated in the first column:
The Works of the Honourable Robert Boyle
Parameter value Result First page number
Volume I
Boyle Prefaces Prefaces of Mr. Boyle to Books Wrote by Other Persons, Advertisements, &c. page 140
Dedication To the Right Honourable Richard Earl of Burlington and Cork, [] (by Andrew Millar, 1744) page i
Life The Life of the Honourable Robert Boyle (by Thomas Birch, 1744) page 1
Physiological Essays Certain Physiological Essays, and Other Tracts; [] (1661; 2nd edition, 1669) page 191
Preface The Preface (by Birch; 27 November 1743 [Julian calendar]) page iii
Salt-petre A Physico-chymical Essay, Concerning an Experiment, with Some Considerations Touching the Differing Parts and Redintegration of Salt-petre (1661) page 230
Seraphic Love Some Motives and Incentives to the Love of God, [] (written 1648; published 1659) page 155
Volume II
New Frigorifick Experiment A New Frigorifick Experiment, Shewing How a Considerable Degree of Cold may be Suddenly Produced without the Help of Snow, Ice, Hail, Wind, or Nitre, and that at any Time of the Year. [] (18 July 1666 [Julian calendar]) page 547
Volume III
Effluviums Essays of the Strange Subtilty, Great Efficacy, Determinate Nature of Effluviums. [] (1673) page 309
[Specify the page.]
  • An Advertisement to the Reader
page 309
[Specify the page. If page 310 is specified, |subtitle=Advertisement or |subtitle=Subtilty must also be specified.]
  • Of the Strange Subtilty of Effluviums
page 310
[Specify the page.]
  • Of the Great Efficacy of Effluviums
page 321
[Specify the page. If page 328 is specified, |subtitle=Efficacy or |subtitle=Determinate must also be specified.]
  • Of the Determinate Nature of Effluviums
page 328
[Specify the page.]
  • New Experiments to Make Fire and Flame Stable and Ponderable
page 340
  • A Discovery of the Perviousness of Glass to Ponderable Parts of Flame. With Some Reflections on It by Way of Corollary
page 350
Flame and Air Tracts. Containing, New Experiments, Touching the Relation betwixt Flame and Air. And about Explosions. An Hydrostatical Discourse, Occasioned by Some Objects of Dr. Henry More against Some Explications of New Experiments Made by the Author of These Tracts: To which is Annexed an Hydrostatical Letter, Dilucidating an Experiment about a Way of Weighing Water in Water. New Experiments, of the Positive or Relative Levity of Bodies under Water, of the Air’s Spring on Bodies under Water, about the Differing Pressure of Heavy Solids and Fluids. (1672) page 247
[Specify the page]
  • The Publisher to the Reader
page 247
  • New Experiments Touching the Relation betwixt Flame and Air. Sent in a Letter to the Learned Publisher of the Philosophical Transactions
page 248
  • New Experiments about the Relation betwixt Air and the Flamma Vitalis of Animals. (Sent to the Same Person, to whom the Former Papers were Addressed [the publisher of the Philosophical Transactions].)
page 261
  • New Experiments about Explosions. (Annexed, by Way of Appendix, to the Former Papers.)
page 266
[Specify the page. If page 289 is specified, |subtitle=Hydrostatical Discourse must also be specified.]
  • An Hydrostatical Discourse, Occasioned by the Objects of the Learned Dr. Henry More, against Some Explications of New Experiments Made by Mr. Boyle; and Now Published by Way of Preface to the Three Ensuing Tracts
page 268
[Specify the page. If page 289 or 293 is specified, |subtitle=Hydrostatical Letter must also be specified.]
  • An Hydrostatical Letter, Written February 14, 167⅔. Containing a Dilucidation of an Experiment of the Honourable Author of These Tracts, about a Way of Weighing Water in Water, upon the Occasion of Some Exceptions, Made to It by Mr. George Sinclair
page 289
[Specify the page. If page 293 is specified, |subtitle=Levity of Bodies must also be specified.]
  • New Experiments of the Positive or Relative Levity of Bodies under Water
page 293
[Specify the page. If page 298 is specified, |subtitle=Air's Spring must also be specified.]
  • New Experiments about the Pressure of the Air’s Spring on Bodies under Water
page 296
[Specify the page. If page 298 is specified, |subtitle=Differing Pressure must also be specified.]
  • New Experiments about the Differing Pressure of Heavy Solids and Fluids
page 298
[Specify the page.]
  • Some Observations about Shining Flesh, both of Veal and of Pullet, and that Without any Sensible Putrefaction in Those Bodies. First Published in the Philosophical Transactions, No. 89, p. 5108, for December 16, 1672 [Julian calendar].
page 304
  • A New Experiment, Concerning an Effect of the Varying Weight of the Atmosphere upon Some Bodies in the Water; Suggesting a Conjecture, that the Very Alterations of the Air, in Point of Weight, may have Considerable Operations, even upon Men’s Sickness or Health. First Published in the Philosophical Transactions, No. XCI. p. 5156, for February 24, 167273 [Julian calendar].
page 307
Volume IV
Mineral Waters Short Memoirs for the Natural Experimental History of Mineral Waters. [] (1685) page 231
New Experiments Physico-Mechanical C2 A Continuation of New Experiments Physico-Mechanical, Touching the Spring and Weight of the Air, and Their Effects. The Second Part. [] (1682) page 96
Notion of Nature A Free Inquiry into the Vulgarly Received Notion of Nature: [] (1686 (indicated as 1685–1686)) page 358
Porosity Experiments and Considerations about the Porosity of Bodies, in Two Essays (1684) page 206
[Specify the page. If page 206 is specified, |subtitle=To the Reader or |subtitle=Animal Bodies must also be specified.]
  • To the Reader
page 206
  • Of the Porousness of Animal Bodies
page 206
  • An Essay of the Porousness of Solid Bodies
page 219
Volume V
  • |subchapter= – a subchapter quoted from.
  • |part= – if a title is divided into parts, the part number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, followed by the name of the part in parentheses.
  • |chapter= and |chaptername= – if a title is divided into chapters, use |chapter= to specify the chapter number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals, and |chaptername= the name of the chapter.
  • |section= – a section number quoted from.
  • |date=, or (|month= and) |year= – if a title is separately dated and the template does not indicate the date, use |date= to specify it in the format 4 August 1680 or August 4, 1680. The date will be converted from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar. If only the month and year, or year alone, of the title is known, use |month= and/or |year= to specify this information.
  • |3= or |page=, or |pages=mandatory in some cases: the page number(s) quoted from in Arabic or lowercase Roman numerals, as the case may be. If quoting a range of pages, note the following:
    • Separate the first and last page number of the range with an en dash, like this: |pages=10–11 or |pages=x–xi.
    • You must also use |pageref= to indicate the page to be linked to (usually the page on which the Wiktionary entry appears).
This parameter must be specified to have the template link to an online version of the work.
  • Volume I:
    • In the main part of the work the pagination restarts from 1.
  • Volume III:
    • Page 309 is misprinted as 409; specify it as |page=309.
  • |column= or |columns= – the column number(s) quoted from, either |column=1 or |column=2. If quoting from both columns, either omit this parameter or separate the column numbers with an en dash, like this: |columns=1–2.
  • |4=, |text=, or |passage= – the passage to be quoted.
  • |footer= – a comment on the passage quoted.
  • |brackets= – use |brackets=on to surround a quotation with brackets. This indicates that the quotation either contains a mere mention of a term (for example, "some people find the word manoeuvre hard to spell") rather than an actual use of it (for example, "we need to manoeuvre carefully to avoid causing upset"), or does not provide an actual instance of a term but provides information about related terms.

Examples

[edit]
  • Wikitext:
    • {{RQ:Boyle Works|volume=II|title=New Frigorifick Experiment|page=549|column=2|passage={{...}} I vvas not deceived in expecting, that the dry ſalt, remaining in the pipkins, being rediſſolved in a due proportion of vvater, vvould very conſiderably '''infrigidate''' it; {{...}}}}; or
    • {{RQ:Boyle Works|II|New Frigorifick Experiment|549|column=2|{{...}} I vvas not deceived in expecting, that the dry ſalt, remaining in the pipkins, being rediſſolved in a due proportion of vvater, vvould very conſiderably '''infrigidate''' it; {{...}}}}
  • Result:
    • 1666 July 29 (Gregorian calendar), Robert Boyle, “A New Frigorifick Experiment, Shewing How a Considerable Degree of Cold may be Suddenly Produced without the Help of Snow, Ice, Hail, Wind, or Nitre, and that at any Time of the Year. []”, in The Works of the Honourable Robert Boyle. [], volume II, London: [] A[ndrew] Millar, [], published 1744, →OCLC, page 549, column 2:
      [] I vvas not deceived in expecting, that the dry ſalt, remaining in the pipkins, being rediſſolved in a due proportion of vvater, vvould very conſiderably infrigidate it; []
  • Wikitext: {{RQ:Boyle Works|volume=III|title=Flame and Air|section=II|chapter=V|page=281|column=1|passage=But that vve may the more diſtinctly conſider this grand argument, {{...}} it vvill be convenient to obſerve, that it does, at once, both propoſe a queſtion, and contain an objection, grounded upon the ſurmiſed '''inſolubleneſs''' of that queſtion.}}
  • Result:
    • 1672, Robert Boyle, “[Tracts. [].] An Hydrostatical Discourse, Occasioned by the Objects of the Learned Dr. Henry More, against Some Explications of New Experiments Made by Mr. Boyle; and Now Published by Way of Preface to the Three Ensuing Tracts. Chapter V.”, in The Works of the Honourable Robert Boyle. [], volume III, London: [] A[ndrew] Millar, [], published 1744, →OCLC, section II, page 281, column 1:
      But that vve may the more diſtinctly conſider this grand argument, [] it vvill be convenient to obſerve, that it does, at once, both propoſe a queſtion, and contain an objection, grounded upon the ſurmiſed inſolubleneſs of that queſtion.