Yes, Word automatically renumbers your footnotes in the order they appear in the document. So if you suddenly add a new footnote between two previously existing ones, Word will renumber them accordingly. The same if you remove them.
By default, footnotes are typically numbered consecutively throughout a document, starting with the number 1 for the first footnote, then 2 for the second, and so on. In most word processing software, such as Microsoft Word, the numbering is automatically updated if footnotes are added or removed. The numbers are usually displayed as superscripts in the text, corresponding to the detailed footnote text at the bottom of the page.
Answer Word doesn't automatically position footnotes, you have to go to either Tools or Format to set it up. If for example you are writing a book, once you have set it up the footnotes will appear on every page until you are finished with your book.
No, you do not have to finish typing the text for one footnote before adding another. Most word processing software allows you to insert multiple footnotes in any order. You can add a footnote, type its text, and then insert another footnote whenever needed. The software will automatically number them sequentially.
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Anywhere In footnotes, "here and there" is passim.
A footnoteis a piece of text which, for some reason, cannot be accommodated within the main body of the document and which is therefore placed elsewhere. It is usual, and preferable, to place footnotes at the bottom of the page on which they are referred to, but this usually requires a great deal of fiddling about, unless you are lucky enough to have a word processor which arranges footnotes automatically. It is easier for the writer to put all the footnotes at the end of the document, but of course this makes life harder for the reader, who is obliged to do a lot of fumbling about in order to find the footnotes. Exception:If you are preparing a work for publication, then you must put all the footnotes on separate pages at the end of your document; such notes are called endnotes. But don't use endnotes in a document which will pass directly from your hands to the reader.
Yes. Go to the insert tab and click on page numbers
The word "Ibid" (without quotation marks) means As above in footnotes when the newest citation matches the citation above it.
possibly "sporadically".
The "Insert Footnote" command in Microsoft Word is located on the "References" tab. When you click on this tab, you'll find the "Footnotes" group, where you can easily insert footnotes into your document.
WordPad is a very basic word processing application which lacks many facilities that a standard word processor would have, including automatic footnotes. So you would have to do them manually which isn't really very practical.
It depends how long each word is.