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word order - "See also" vs. "Also see" as a heading - English Language ...
Why is it see also, then? Because see also is an idiom in citation style: see also Used to refer a reader to another work that is related to the topic being discussed. Watkin’s interpretation of this scene from Hamlet clearly supports the theory. See also the analysis by J. R. Prewitt on the matter. See also: also, see Source: Farlex ...
Meaning of 'cf.' - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
In practice cf means "see also". As explained by MachineCharmer, it is the abbreviation of Latin 'confer' and it is used in several languages in addition to English. English being a conservative language has many more of these Latin abbreviations of Latin origin: cf 'i.e.', 'e.g.', 'viz', ' et al ', ' ca ', ' q.v. ', 'a.d.', 'vs', etc ...
word choice - What is the name of the symbols - and ">"?
There are also these bits: The = entries are unofficial synonyms or common names, kind of like the common names used instead the formal scientific genus and species names in biology. The x entries are basically SEE ALSOs for confusables. The * entries are informative notes.
Secondary citation and intro signals (i.e. see, see also, e.g., c.f ...
Also note that depending on the field and how common the name is, the naming itself might not warrant a citation. To answer the question in the title, I would only use "as cited in" if the original citation was not available anymore, you have no way to verify its claims, but somehow you do need to cite that original paper.
Is there a "see also" parenthetical citation abbreviation?
“God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble” (Proverbs 3:34, James 4:6, 1 Peter 5:5; see also Psalm 138:6, Proverbs 29:23, Matthew 23:12, Luke 1:52). In this example the first three verses contain the quote exactly while the following four citations are verses with a similar meaning.
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