APA (7th ed.) Citation

(1861). The Second Confederate speller: Having for its basis the phonetics and orthoepical rules of the language, in which are more than six thousand primitive words, containing nearly eight thousand substitutes, being designed to call attention to the positive orthographical difficulties of the language. [J.B. McFerrin].

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

The Second Confederate Speller: Having for Its Basis the Phonetics and Orthoepical Rules of the Language, in Which Are More than Six Thousand Primitive Words, Containing Nearly Eight Thousand Substitutes, Being Designed to Call Attention to the Positive Orthographical Difficulties of the Language. [Nashville, Tenn.]: [J.B. McFerrin], 1861.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

The Second Confederate Speller: Having for Its Basis the Phonetics and Orthoepical Rules of the Language, in Which Are More than Six Thousand Primitive Words, Containing Nearly Eight Thousand Substitutes, Being Designed to Call Attention to the Positive Orthographical Difficulties of the Language. [J.B. McFerrin], 1861.

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