It depends on the citation style or convention you're using. A common convention is the APA Citation Style, in which case it should be in the order:
Author's family name, Initials of Author's first names. (Year, Month, Date if applicable). Article title. Title of the magazine in italics, Page numbers.
Also remember that each reference requires an indent on the first line.
Mershon, D. H. (1998, November/December). Star Trek on the brain: Alien minds, human minds. American Scientist, pg. 64.
References can be noted at the end of the page or in the index bibliography if the reference material is published as a book or some journal /magazine - other wise you cannot give self reference to your own article.
An online magazine article is the same as an article in a paper magazine except you can find it online, usually through the magazine's own website or through an article aggregation site. You can find an example through the given link.
Smithsonian
the magazine Living Without
No.
It is in the American Girl magazine 20th edition that has the room refresher article.
Single in the City was a magazine article about Denver's 24 "hottest catches" - singles looking for love. The magazine that ran it was the magazine 5280, a local Denver periodical.
The editorial page is the page of a newspaper or a magazine where the editor, or someone on the editorial staff, writes something. And "opposite editorial page" is just that, a reference to where you can find another article.
The reference list at the end of an article is called a "bibliography" or "works cited." It provides detailed information about the sources cited within the article to enable readers to locate and verify the information.
Magazine articles are secondary sources
Sure! Here is an example of a complete citation for a magazine article: Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of the Article." Name of the Magazine, vol. number, no. number, publication date, page range.
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