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Bibliographic format Chicago Notes
See our About Footnotes page for explanations on how to create and format footnotes. Our Endnote Style tab explains how to create both footnotes and your bibliography using endnote reference software. If you use EndNote, the style is called th Footnote. For further examples and explanations refer to Notes and Bibliography: Example Quotations. The following examples illustrate the notes and style of the bibliography. The example notes show full citations followed by shortened forms that would be used after the first citation. Sample bibliographic entries follow the notes. For more details and many more examples, see, of Follow the format shown below to create a note and, if necessary, a bibliographic entry for an image displayed online. Make sure you cite the page where the image is hosted and not, for example, the Google search results where you found it. Chicago Bibliography. Author's last name, first name.The Chicago Manual of Style 17th ed. provides standardized rules for formatting paper margins, line spacing, etc., as well as a consistent method for citing ideas, actions, facts, and paraphrases borrowed from other sources. Chicago style has two different methods for citing the source. Notes: The bibliography style uses the annotation that appears on a new line directly after the source citation. The entire annotation is indented, to make it clear when the annotation ends and a new source appears. According to Turabian guidelines, annotations should be formatted like the main text of any article: double-spaced. Left aligned.
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