APA (7th ed.) Citation

North, R., & Curll, E. (1715). The gentleman accomptant: or, an essay to unfold the mystery of accompts.: By way of debitor and creditor, commonly called merchants accompts; and applying the same to the concerns of the nobility and gentry of England. Shewing, I. The great advantage of gentlemen's keeping their own accompts; with directions to persons of quality and fortune. II. The ruin that attends men of estates, by neglect of accompts. III. The usefulness of the knowledge of accompts, to such as are any way employed in the publick affairs of the nation. IV. Of banks, stocks, &c. with a detection of the friends of stock-jobbing. V.A short and easy vocabulary of certain words, that in the language of accompting take a particular meaning. (The second edition.). Printed for E. Curll, at the Dial and Bible against St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet street.

Chicago Style (17th ed.) Citation

North, Roger, and Edmund Curll. The Gentleman Accomptant: Or, an Essay to Unfold the Mystery of Accompts.: By Way of Debitor and Creditor, Commonly Called Merchants Accompts; and Applying the Same to the Concerns of the Nobility and Gentry of England. Shewing, I. The Great Advantage of Gentlemen's Keeping Their Own Accompts; with Directions to Persons of Quality and Fortune. II. The Ruin That Attends Men of Estates, by Neglect of Accompts. III. The Usefulness of the Knowledge of Accompts, to Such as Are Any Way Employed in the Publick Affairs of the Nation. IV. Of Banks, Stocks, &c. with a Detection of the Friends of Stock-jobbing. V.A Short and Easy Vocabulary of Certain Words, That in the Language of Accompting Take a Particular Meaning. The second edition. London: Printed for E. Curll, at the Dial and Bible against St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet street, 1715.

MLA (9th ed.) Citation

North, Roger, and Edmund Curll. The Gentleman Accomptant: Or, an Essay to Unfold the Mystery of Accompts.: By Way of Debitor and Creditor, Commonly Called Merchants Accompts; and Applying the Same to the Concerns of the Nobility and Gentry of England. Shewing, I. The Great Advantage of Gentlemen's Keeping Their Own Accompts; with Directions to Persons of Quality and Fortune. II. The Ruin That Attends Men of Estates, by Neglect of Accompts. III. The Usefulness of the Knowledge of Accompts, to Such as Are Any Way Employed in the Publick Affairs of the Nation. IV. Of Banks, Stocks, &c. with a Detection of the Friends of Stock-jobbing. V.A Short and Easy Vocabulary of Certain Words, That in the Language of Accompting Take a Particular Meaning. The second edition. Printed for E. Curll, at the Dial and Bible against St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet street, 1715.

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