APA (7th ed.) Citation

Wingate, E. (1648). Logarithmotechnia, or The construction and use of the logarithmeticall tables: By the helpe whereof, multiplication is performed by addition, division by subtraction, the extraction of the square root by bipartition, and of the cube root by tripartition, &c. Finally, the golden rule, and the resolution of triangles as well right lined as sphericall by addition and substraction. First published in the French tongue by Edmund Wingate, an English gentleman: and after translated into English by the same author (The third edition, diligently corrected, and much enlarged by the author himself.). printed by Miles Flesher.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Wingate, Edmund. Logarithmotechnia, or The Construction and Use of the Logarithmeticall Tables: By the Helpe Whereof, Multiplication Is Performed by Addition, Division by Subtraction, the Extraction of the Square Root by Bipartition, and of the Cube Root by Tripartition, &c. Finally, the Golden Rule, and the Resolution of Triangles as Well Right Lined as Sphericall by Addition and Substraction. First Published in the French Tongue by Edmund Wingate, an English Gentleman: And After Translated into English by the Same Author. The third edition, diligently corrected, and much enlarged by the author himself. London: printed by Miles Flesher, 1648.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Wingate, Edmund. Logarithmotechnia, or The Construction and Use of the Logarithmeticall Tables: By the Helpe Whereof, Multiplication Is Performed by Addition, Division by Subtraction, the Extraction of the Square Root by Bipartition, and of the Cube Root by Tripartition, &c. Finally, the Golden Rule, and the Resolution of Triangles as Well Right Lined as Sphericall by Addition and Substraction. First Published in the French Tongue by Edmund Wingate, an English Gentleman: And After Translated into English by the Same Author. The third edition, diligently corrected, and much enlarged by the author himself. printed by Miles Flesher, 1648.

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