APA Citation

Finley, S. (1748). A vindication of the charitable plea for the speechless: In answer to Mr. Abel Morgan's Antipaedorantism. Wherein the points in controversy are more largely opened, and his objections particularly considered, and refuted. The whole is freely submitted to the judgment of common sense. By Samuel Finly, V.D.M. at Nottingham, in Pennsylvania. [Two lines from Mark]. Philadelphia: Printed and sold by William Bradford, at the Sign of the Bible in Second-Street.

Chicago Style Citation

Finley, Samuel. A Vindication of the Charitable Plea for the Speechless: In Answer to Mr. Abel Morgan's Antipaedorantism. Wherein the Points in Controversy Are More Largely Opened, and His Objections Particularly Considered, and Refuted. The Whole Is Freely Submitted to the Judgment of Common Sense. By Samuel Finly, V.D.M. At Nottingham, in Pennsylvania. [Two Lines From Mark]. Philadelphia: Printed and sold by William Bradford, at the Sign of the Bible in Second-Street, 1748.

MLA Citation

Finley, Samuel. A Vindication of the Charitable Plea for the Speechless: In Answer to Mr. Abel Morgan's Antipaedorantism. Wherein the Points in Controversy Are More Largely Opened, and His Objections Particularly Considered, and Refuted. The Whole Is Freely Submitted to the Judgment of Common Sense. By Samuel Finly, V.D.M. At Nottingham, in Pennsylvania. [Two Lines From Mark]. Philadelphia: Printed and sold by William Bradford, at the Sign of the Bible in Second-Street, 1748.

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