0 used in academic writing to say that information about a particular subject can be found in various places in a text :
For descriptions of this, see Howarth, Book of Concord, pp. 5, 9-10, 16, 37-41, and passim.
The predominant approach of each paper has been described by reading the abstract, conclusions and selectively passim.
Davidson has recently reassessed hypocrisy's redefinition as a condemned practice of deceit from the late-eighteenth century onwards, distinct from earlier discourses on polite manners (passim).
One central result of their various analyses of'collective actions' is that violence often only comes into play as 'elite reactions to the claims of ordinary people' (288 and passim).
See further note 1 and passim.
Passim in the name is pronounced with the accent on the second syllable and as if that were seem; it derives from "passim" (usually pronounced differently), commonly found in footnotes.