Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In the Notes and Bibliography system, you should include a note (endnote or footnote) each time you use a source, whether through a direct quote, paraphrase, or summary. Footnotes are added at the end of the page on which the source is referenced, while endnotes are compiled at the end of each chapter or at the end of the entire document.
This workshop provides an overview of citation practices in the Chicago Manual of Style (CMOS) and where to find help with different CMOS resources on the OWL. It provides an annotated list of links to all of our CMOS materials as well as a general CMOS overview.
APA style offers writers footnotes and appendices as spaces where additional, relevant information might be shared within a document; this resource offers a quick overview of format and content concerns for these segments of a document.
In Chicago notes and bibliography style, you can use either footnotes or endnotes, and citations follow the same format in either case. In APA and MLA style, footnotes or endnotes are not used for citations, but they can be used to provide additional information.
This is a guide from Purdue OWL on how to use Chicago/Turabian 17th edition focusing on the Notes-Bibliography (Footnotes) version. It also has a citation generator that uses Chegg's Citation Machine to generate citations.
A footnote is listed at the bottom of the page on which the reference occurs, while endnotes are compiled at the end of the chapter, paper, article, or book. After you have quoted, paraphrased, or summarized someone else's work, place a superscript number at the end of the sentence or clause.
By contrast, NB uses numbered footnotes in the text to direct the reader to a shortened citation at the bottom of the page. This corresponds to a fuller citation on a Bibliography page that concludes the document.