User:Yulemorelli/sandbox

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Editing Practice[edit]

Text Emphasis[edit]

italic

bold

bold italic


Linking[edit]

Antoine Vollon

Little Red Riding Hood#Modern uses and adaptations

Modern hoods

Artist

Citations[edit]

This is just an example. [1] here is some more text.[2] and now for a third citation. [3]


Notes[edit]

  1. ^ name of book. year. publisher
  2. ^ Morelli, Shannon (2014). The Best Book. NY: Random House.
  3. ^ magazine title, year, volume number

References[edit]

  • Brown, Rebecca (2006). "Size of the Moon", Scientific American, 51(78).
  • Miller, Edward (2005). The Sun. Academic Press.
  • xxxx, bbbb (1930). ok.

Article creation[edit]

Alexis Vollon

Info boxes[edit]

Yulemorelli/sandbox
Morrissey
Background information
OriginManchester
Years active1988-present
MembersSteven Patrick Morrissey
Websitehttp://www.morrissey-solo.com/

Tables[edit]

Image Artist Title Date
Bronzino Bronzino (1503-1572) Ludovico Capponi 1550-1555
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780-1867) Contesse d'Haussonville 1845
Example Example Example
New New New

Columns[edit]

Henry Clay Frick was born 19 December 1849, in West Overton, Pa. One of six children, his parents were John W. Frick, a farmer, and Elizabeth Overholt Frick, the daughter of a whiskey distiller and flour merchant. Frick ended his formal education in 1866 at the age of seventeen, and began work as a clerk at an uncle's store in Mt. Pleasant, Pa. In 1871, Frick borrowed money to purchase a share in a coking concern that would eventually become the H.C. Frick Coke Co. Over the next decade, Frick expanded his business through the acquisition of more coal lands and coke ovens, and joined forces with fellow industrialist Andrew Carnegie in 1882. He assumed the chairmanship of Carnegie Bros. & Co. (later Carnegie Steel Co.) in 1889. He served in that capacity until his resignation from the company in December 1899. During his tenure as chairman, differences between Frick and Carnegie emerged, most significantly in their approach to labor issues. The 1892 Homestead Strike further strained relations between the two men, and in 1899, after Carnegie attempted to buy out Frick's share in the company for a fraction of its value, Frick sued. Frick eventually received a satisfactory price for his shares, but permanently severed his relationship with Carnegie.

wikibooks: US History/Age of Invention and Gilded Age

wikivoyage: Ischia