This template can be used to indicate quotations from P. G. Wodehouse's work Uneasy Money (1st collected edition, 1916), which was first published in the US in The Saturday Evening Post from December 1915. It can be used to create a link to an online version of the work at the Internet Archive.
|1=
or |chapter=
– the chapter number quoted from in uppercase Roman numerals.|2=
or |page=
, or |pages=
– mandatory in some cases: the page number(s) quoted from. When quoting a range of pages, note the following:
|pages=110–111
.|pageref=
to specify the page number that the template should link to (usually the page on which the Wiktionary entry appears).|3=
, |text=
, or |passage=
– a passage quoted from the work.|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:Wodehouse Uneasy Money|chapter=XXIII|page=306|passage=If he had legged it on his own account, because what he heard me say '''got his goat''', I could understand that.}}
; or{{RQ:Wodehouse Uneasy Money|XXIII|306|If he had legged it on his own account, because what he heard me say '''got his goat''', I could understand that.}}
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