A number corresponding to the element in the main document and the footnote itself, under a horizontal line, which helps indicate that it is a footnote and not part of the main text.
A note reference mark signals that an explanatory note exists at the bottom of the page as a footnote. Each mark corresponds to a specific note providing additional information or citations related to the text.
Note reference mark.
footnote
That is a reference mark. At the bottom of the page or in the margin, there should be another ii mark that explains what it is. It could be a reference to a verse that is similar or that word that is in another verse.
That is a reference mark. At the bottom of the page or in the margin, there should be another ii mark that explains what it is. It could be a reference to a verse that is similar or that word that is in another verse.
This reference probably comes at the end of Mark 16:"...these signs shall follow them that believe; In My name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them..." (Mark 16:17-18).An NIV footnote, here, states: "9. [[The most reliable early manuscripts and other ancient witnesses do not have Mark 16:9-20.]]"
A star-shaped punctuation mark, also known as an asterisk (*), is used to indicate a footnote, reference, or to highlight specific information in a text. It can also be used for emphasis or to symbolize multiplication in mathematical equations.
In MLA style, the superscript number is used as a note reference mark to signal the existence of an explanatory note. The superscript number corresponds to the note located at the bottom of the page or end of the document.
pogi ako by mark vincent buising
The two main parts of citing are in-text citations within the body of the work and a corresponding reference list at the end. In-text citations provide brief details to identify the source of information, while the reference list gives full bibliographic information for each source cited in the work.
John the Baptist was beheaded. The reference is Mark 6:14-29. To read Mark 6:14-29 visit the Related Link.
It appears to be a question mark