APA (7th ed.) Citation

(1692). The life of William Fuller, the late pretended evidence now a prisoner in the King's-Bench, who was declared by the Honourable House of Commons, Nemine contradicente, to be a notorious imposter, a cheat, and a false accuser of persons of honour and quality: With all his pranks and villainies, &c. to this present first of March. Printed for Abel Roper.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

The Life of William Fuller, the Late Pretended Evidence Now a Prisoner in the King's-Bench, Who Was Declared by the Honourable House of Commons, Nemine Contradicente, to Be a Notorious Imposter, a Cheat, and a False Accuser of Persons of Honour and Quality: With All His Pranks and Villainies, &c. to This Present First of March. London: Printed for Abel Roper, 1692.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

The Life of William Fuller, the Late Pretended Evidence Now a Prisoner in the King's-Bench, Who Was Declared by the Honourable House of Commons, Nemine Contradicente, to Be a Notorious Imposter, a Cheat, and a False Accuser of Persons of Honour and Quality: With All His Pranks and Villainies, &c. to This Present First of March. Printed for Abel Roper, 1692.

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