...and some more Latin
The other main Latin conventions used in the Oxford system occur when you are referring to a work that you have cited earlier, but which is not the last one cited.
If you are again citing Welbourne but have cited several other works since the original time and the page numbers are the same, use "loc. cit." (loco citato - in the place cited).
1 Michael Welbourne, Understanding Teams. (French's Forest, Prentice Hall, 2001), p5.
2 Jo Saunders & Alison Brewer, Workplace Team Effectiveness. (Frankston, Chisholm Publishing, 1999), p32.
3 Welbourne, loc. cit.
The abbreviation "op. cit." or "opere citato" (meaning "in the work cited") is used when the page numbers are not the same.
1 Michael Welbourne, Understanding Teams. (French's Forest, Prentice Hall, 2001), p5.
2 Jo Saunders & Alison Brewer, Workplace Team Effectiveness. (Frankston, Chisholm Publishing, 1999), p32.
3 Welbourne, op. cit., p32.



