APA (7th ed.) Citation

Mason, M. (1655). A check to the loftie linguist. Or The impudency of a smooth tongu'd pastour plainly made manifest: In a review of severall assertions given forth by George Scortrith a pretended minister of the Gospel in Lincolne. Upon a providentiall discourse there, betwixt him, and one Robert Craven, whom the world calls a Quaker. Printed for Giles Calvert at the Black Spread-Eagle at the west end of Pauls.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Mason, Martin. A Check to the Loftie Linguist. Or The Impudency of a Smooth Tongu'd Pastour Plainly Made Manifest: In a Review of Severall Assertions Given Forth by George Scortrith a Pretended Minister of the Gospel in Lincolne. Upon a Providentiall Discourse There, Betwixt Him, and One Robert Craven, Whom the World Calls a Quaker. London: Printed for Giles Calvert at the Black Spread-Eagle at the west end of Pauls, 1655.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Mason, Martin. A Check to the Loftie Linguist. Or The Impudency of a Smooth Tongu'd Pastour Plainly Made Manifest: In a Review of Severall Assertions Given Forth by George Scortrith a Pretended Minister of the Gospel in Lincolne. Upon a Providentiall Discourse There, Betwixt Him, and One Robert Craven, Whom the World Calls a Quaker. Printed for Giles Calvert at the Black Spread-Eagle at the west end of Pauls, 1655.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.