APA (7th ed.) Citation

Aesop. (1771). Æsop naturaliz'd: In a collection of diverting fables and stories from Æsop, Lockman, Pilpay and others. With useful morals and reflections: in easy and familiar verse. Adapted to all Capacities, and intended principally for the Entertainment and Instruction of the Youth of both Sexes (The seventh edition. With the addition of above fifty new fables.). printed for C. Bathurst, in Fleet-Street; S. Crowder, and S. Bladon, in Pater-Noster-Row, and W. Woodfall, in White-Friars.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

Aesop. Æsop Naturaliz'd: In a Collection of Diverting Fables and Stories from Æsop, Lockman, Pilpay and Others. With Useful Morals and Reflections: In Easy and Familiar Verse. Adapted to All Capacities, and Intended Principally for the Entertainment and Instruction of the Youth of Both Sexes. The seventh edition. With the addition of above fifty new fables. London: printed for C. Bathurst, in Fleet-Street; S. Crowder, and S. Bladon, in Pater-Noster-Row, and W. Woodfall, in White-Friars, 1771.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

Aesop. Æsop Naturaliz'd: In a Collection of Diverting Fables and Stories from Æsop, Lockman, Pilpay and Others. With Useful Morals and Reflections: In Easy and Familiar Verse. Adapted to All Capacities, and Intended Principally for the Entertainment and Instruction of the Youth of Both Sexes. The seventh edition. With the addition of above fifty new fables. printed for C. Bathurst, in Fleet-Street; S. Crowder, and S. Bladon, in Pater-Noster-Row, and W. Woodfall, in White-Friars, 1771.

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