Separate Footnote Accreditation

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Jonathan W
2019-05-27
Decent, though the affiliated linked program options which supposedly come with the upgrade purchase don't seem to work / or be actually as advertised.
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2019-10-07
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In Chicago footnote referencing, when you cite the same source twice in a row, you can use the Latin abbreviation ibid. This literally translates as in the same place. If you are citing exactly the same page as before, you can use ibid. By itself.
You're able to reference footnotes multiple times in Microsoft Word by using cross-references. However, cross-references have a minor limitation if you insert another footnote above the original one, the footnote number will update, automatically, immediately, but the cross-reference number will not.
Consecutive references: When you are referencing the same source in two (or more) footnotes the second and subsequent references should be entered as “Ibid.” and the page number for the relevant footnote. Use “Ibid.” without any page number if the page is the same as the previous reference. Example footnotes: 1.
In Chicago footnote referencing, when you cite the same source twice in a row, you can use the Latin abbreviation ibid. This literally translates as in the same place. If you are citing exactly the same page as before, you can use ibid.
If you are citing multiple articles within the same paragraph, then you need to include an in-text or parenthetical citation for every idea or thought even if each article is referred to multiple times within the same paragraph.
In short: When referring to the same source twice in a row, use ibid; when referring to a source you used earlier (but you have cited different sources in between), use the (n X) approach. You only need one.
Click where you want to add a footnote. Click References > Insert Footnote. Word inserts a reference mark in the text and adds the footnote mark at the bottom of the page. Type the footnote text. Tip: To return to your place in your document, double-click the footnote mark.
In Chicago footnote referencing, when you cite the same source twice in a row, you can use the Latin abbreviation ibid. This literally translates as in the same place. If you are citing exactly the same page as before, you can use ibid.
If you are citing them in-text more than once, and you are referring to the same source each time, then you can simply reuse that same in-text reference with a single entry on your references page at the end. If you are citing the same author, but from different sources, you may have to follow different rules.
In short: When referring to the same source twice in a row, use ibid; when referring to a source you used earlier (but you have cited different sources in between), use the (n X) approach. You only need one. Ibid (n 1) is wrong and/or a waste of words.
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