This template may be used in Wiktionary entries to format quotations from Washington Irving's work Wolfert’s Roost and Other Papers (1st edition, 1855), and Wolfert's Roost, and Miscellanies (1883) which contains additional writings. It can be used to create a link to online versions of the work at the Internet Archive:
The template takes the following parameters:
|year=
– mandatory in some cases: if quoting from the 1883 version, specify |year=1883
.|1=
or |chapter=
– mandatory: the name of the chapter quoted from. If the parameter is given the value indicated in the first column of the following table, the template will display what is indicated in the second column:Parameter value | Result |
---|---|
The Abencerrage | The Abencerrage. |
The Adalantado of the Seven Cities | The Adalantado of the Seven Cities. A Legend of St. Brendan. |
The Bermudas | The Bermudas. A Shakespearian Research. |
Broek | Broek: The Dutch Paradise |
The Conspiracy of Neamathla | The Conspiracy of Neamathla. An Authentic Sketch. |
The Creole Village | The Creole Village. A Sketch from a Steamboat. |
Don Juan | Don Juan: A Spectral Research |
The Early Experiences of Ralph Ringwood | The Early Experiences of Ralph Ringwood. |
English and French Character | English and French Character. |
The Englishman at Paris | The Englishman at Paris. |
The Field of Waterloo | The Field of Waterloo. |
The Grand Prior of Minorca | The Grand Prior of Minorca. A Veritable Ghost Story. |
The Great Mississippi Bubble | The Great Mississippi Bubble. |
Guests from Gibbet-Island | Guests from Gibbet-Island. A Legend of Communipaw. Found among the Knickerbocker Papers at Wolfert’s Roost. |
Mountjoy | Mountjoy: Or Some Passages out of the Life of a Castle-builder |
My French Neighbor | My French Neighbor. |
Origin of the White, the Red, and the Black Men | Origin of the White, the Red, and the Black Men. |
The Parisian Hotel | The Parisian Hotel. |
Paris at the Restoration | Paris at the Restoration. |
The Three Kings of Bermuda | The Three Kings of Bermuda. And Their Treasure of Ambergris. |
A Time of Unexampled Prosperity | ‘A Time of Unexampled Prosperity’ |
The Tuileries and Windsor Castle | The Tuileries and Windsor Castle. |
The Widow's Ordeal | The Widow’s Ordeal, or A Judicial Trial by Combat |
Wolfert's Roost | Wolfert’s Roost |
|chronicle=
– the chapter "Wolfert's Roost" is divided into three "chronicles". Use this parameter to specify the chronicle number in uppercase Roman numerals, from |chronicle=I
to |chronicle=III
.|2=
or |page=
, or |pages=
– mandatory in some cases: the page or range of pages quoted from. If quoting a range of pages, note the following:
|pages=10–11
.|pageref=
to indicate the page to be linked to (usually the page on which the Wiktionary entry appears).|3=
, |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.{{RQ:Irving Wolfert's Roost|chapter=The Grand Prior of Minorca|page=133|passage=Instead of being a hardy body of "monk-knights," {{...}} they led a life of luxury and '''libertinism''', and were to be found in the most voluptuous courts of Europe.}}
; or{{RQ:Irving Wolfert's Roost|The Grand Prior of Minorca|133|Instead of being a hardy body of "monk-knights," {{...}} they led a life of luxury and '''libertinism''', and were to be found in the most voluptuous courts of Europe.}}
{{RQ:Irving Wolfert's Roost|year=1883|chapter=National Nomenclature|page=71|passage=I have, on a former occasion, suggested the expediency of searching out the original Indian names of places, and wherever they are striking and '''euphonious''', and those by which they have been superseded are glaringly objectionable, to restore them. They would have the merit of originality, and of belonging to the country; and they would remain as reliques of the native lords of the soil, when every other vestige had disappeared.}}
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