This template may be used on Wiktionary entry pages to quote Samuel Purchas's work Purchas His Pilgrimes (1625–1626, 5 volumes). It can be used to create a link to online versions of the work at Google Books:
The template takes the following parameters:
|author=
– the name of the author of the portion of the work quoted from, if it is not Purchas and not automatically determined by the template.|1=
or |part=
– mandatory: the part of the work quoted from in Arabic numerals, from |part=1
to |part=5
.|2=
or |chapter=
– the name of the chapter quoted from. If quoting from one of the three chapters after the 9th book in the 5th part, the name of the chapter will be automatically stated if the page number quoted from is specified.|section=
– the section number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals and, if desired, followed by the section name in parentheses; for example, |section=III (The Pyramides Viewed, Sphynx and Other Antiquities. Iourney from Cairo to Gaza.)
.|3=
or |page=
, or |pages=
– the page number(s) quoted from. In the 1st part of the work, as the 1st book is paginated from 1 to 186 and then the page number restarts from 1 in the 2nd book, |book=1
must be specified if quoting from that book. When quoting a range of pages, note the following:
|pages=10–11
.|pageref=
to specify the page number that the template should link to (usually the page on which the Wiktionary entry appears).|line=
or |lines=
– the line number(s) quoted from. If quoting a range of lines, separate the first and last numbers of the range with an en dash, like this: |lines=10–11
.|4=
, |text=
, or |passage=
– a passage to be quoted from the work.|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:Purchas Pilgrimes|part=3|chapter=Obseruations Gathered out of the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Bookes of Iosephvs Acosta, {{...|a Learned Iesuite,}} Touching the Naturall Historie of the Heauens, Ayre, Water, and Earth at the West Indies.{{nb...|Also of Their Beasts, Fishes, Fowles, Plants, and Other Remarkable Rarities of Nature.}}|page=928|section=II|passage=To this day they haue not diſouered at the ''Indies'' any '''Mediterranean Sea''', as in ''Europe'', ''Aſia'', and ''Affrica'', into the which there enters ſome arme of this great Sea, and makes diſtinct Seas, taking their names from the Prouinces they waſh: and almoſt all of the '''Mediterranean Seas''' continue and ioyne together, and with the Ocean it ſelfe, by the ſtraight of ''Gibraltar'', which the Ancients called, the Pillers of ''Hercules'', {{...}}}}
; or{{RQ:Purchas Pilgrimes|3|Obseruations Gathered out of the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Bookes of Iosephvs Acosta, {{...|a Learned Iesuite,}} Touching the Naturall Historie of the Heauens, Ayre, Water, and Earth at the West Indies.{{nb...|Also of Their Beasts, Fishes, Fowles, Plants, and Other Remarkable Rarities of Nature.}}|928|section=II|To this day they haue not diſouered at the ''Indies'' any '''Mediterranean Sea''', as in ''Europe'', ''Aſia'', and ''Affrica'', into the which there enters ſome arme of this great Sea, and makes diſtinct Seas, taking their names from the Prouinces they waſh: and almoſt all of the '''Mediterranean Seas''' continue and ioyne together, and with the Ocean it ſelfe, by the ſtraight of ''Gibraltar'', which the Ancients called, the Pillers of ''Hercules'', {{...}}}}
{{RQ:Purchas Pilgrimes|part=5|page=993|passage=he famous Ganges: whoſe vnknowne head, pleaſant ſtreames, and long extent, haue amongſt thoſe Heathen Inhabitants, (by the Tradition of their Forefathers) gained a beliefe of '''clenſing''' all ſuch ſinnes, as the bodies of thoſe that waſh therein brought with them: {{...}}}}
{{RQ:Purchas Pilgrimes|part=3|author=Yvo of Narbena; w:Matthew Paris|chapter=Part of an Epistle Written by One Yvo of Narbena vnto the Archbishop of Burdeaux, Containing the Confession of an Englishman, as Touching the Barbarous Demeanour of the Tartars, which had Liued Long among Them, and was Drawne along Perforce with Them in Their Expedition against Hungarie: Recorded by Matthew Paris in the Year Our Lord 1243|pages=63–64|pageref=63|passage=Like barbarous miſcreants, they '''quelled''' Virgins vnto death, {{...}}}}
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