Notes placed at the bottom of a page that comment on something in the body of the text
A footnote is a note of text placed at the bottom of a page in a book or document. The note comments on and may cite a reference for part of the main body of text. A footnote is normally flagged by a superscript number following that portion of the text the note is in reference to.
A footnote is a note on a foot
Show how a footnote is shown for a definition the the text of a research paper?
NO
YES
The footnote number is usually inserted as a superscript number at the end of the sentence or phrase where the footnote reference is located. It appears after any punctuation marks.
To properly footnote a book in Chicago style, include the author's name, book title, publication information, and page number in the footnote. Use a superscript number to indicate the footnote in the text.
It is the Footer.
A footnote is used to indicate the source of the text. It can also be used to emphasize something or emphasize a part of the text. The story is entitled "Footnote to Youth" since it also emphasizes something for the youth to realize---and that is not to marry early.
That is called a footnote. Footnotes provide additional information or citations for sources referenced in the main text. They usually appear at the bottom of the same page or at the end of the document.
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.
You should use a footnote in your writing to provide additional information, citations, or explanations that are not essential to the main text but are still relevant to your topic.
no