Rujukan James_while_John_had_had_had_had_had_had_had_had_had_had_had_a_better_effect_on_the_teacher

  1. Magonet, Jonathan (2004). A rabbi reads the Bible (ed. 2nd). SCM-Canterbury Press. m/s. 19. ISBN 978-0-334-02952-6. Dicapai pada 2009-04-30. You may remember an old classroom test in English language. What punctuation marks do you have to add to this sentence so as to make sense of it?
  2. Alan Dundes; Carl R. Pagter (1987). When you're up to your ass in alligators: more urban folklore from the paperwork empire (ed. Illustrated). Wayne State University Press. m/s. 135. ISBN 0-8143-1867-3. Dicapai pada 2009-04-30. The object of this and similar tests is to make sense of a series of words by figuring out the correct intonation pattern.
  3. Hudson, Grover (1999). Essential introductory linguistics. Wiley-Blackwell. m/s. 372. ISBN 0-631-20304-4. Dicapai pada 2009-04-30. Writing is secondary to speech, in history and in the fact that speech and not writing is fundamental to the human species.
  4. van de Velde, Roger G. (1992). Text and thinking: on some roles of thinking in text interpretation (ed. Illustrated). Walter de Gruyter. m/s. 43. ISBN 3-11-013250-8. Dicapai pada 2009-04-30. In scanning across lines, readers also make use of the information parts carried along with the punctuatuion markes: a period, a dash, a colon, a semicolon or a comma may signal different degrees of integration/separation between the groupings.
  5. "Problem C: Operator Jumble". 31st ACM International Collegiate Programming Conference, 2006–2007.