Lane, A. (1698). A rational and speedy method of attaining to the Latin tongue: In two parts : the first containing such precepts as are common to all languages, the second contains what is more peculiar to the Latin tongue : the whole being accommodated to the meanest capacities, not only persons of riper years, but any child that can read English ... Printed for J. Harris ... and A. Bell ....
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationLane, A. A Rational and Speedy Method of Attaining to the Latin Tongue: In Two Parts : The First Containing Such Precepts as Are Common to All Languages, the Second Contains What Is More Peculiar to the Latin Tongue : The Whole Being Accommodated to the Meanest Capacities, Not Only Persons of Riper Years, but Any Child That Can Read English ... London: Printed for J. Harris ... and A. Bell ..., 1698.
MLA (8th ed.) CitationLane, A. A Rational and Speedy Method of Attaining to the Latin Tongue: In Two Parts : The First Containing Such Precepts as Are Common to All Languages, the Second Contains What Is More Peculiar to the Latin Tongue : The Whole Being Accommodated to the Meanest Capacities, Not Only Persons of Riper Years, but Any Child That Can Read English ... Printed for J. Harris ... and A. Bell ..., 1698.