Yes, you do. Footnotes allow the reader to find the source of your information in a particular sentence or paragraph or to check your research. You need to footnote any direct quotations, statistics, or pieces of information that aren't considered general knowledge about the given topic. You can also use footnotes as a form of author's notes to clarify something or make comments about the text, but it's often best to do these things within the text of your essay.
A bibliography is a list at the end of your essay of all the works cited and uncited that helped you research and prepare for this essay. You may have read several books or documents to get a feel for your topic but only used direct quotations or statistics out of some of them. All those books and documents should still go into the bibliography.
No, but you still need to give the URL
Most of the time you do. If it wasn't recommended I would do it just to be sure. A properly compiled bibliography shows the readers exactly what books, articles and other materials you have used.
Chicago Referencing comprises both the footnotes and bibliography style, used most frequently in the humanities, and the parenthetic and reference list style, used most frequently in the sciences. The former resembles the Oxford Referencing Style and the latter resembles the Harvard Referencing Style (both of these are covered above). I have provided a link below to an article explaining how to use the Chicago referencing format...
this is the study of the history of books, their publication and printing as distinct from their contents. It is also a list of the authors works. Your would find this information in a specialist museum or a library
Footnotes are what you use in like an essay paper to explain something that you have wrote in there. When you write an essay and you are in Microsoft word, some computers have soemthing at the top that says footnotes. Click that after you highlight the word you want to explain then a little 1 at the bottom of the page near the foot of the page will come up. Then you write what the word means and stuff like that, because it is a note at the foot of the page. That is how it gets the name FOOTNOTE.
Yes, it is recommended to include a bibliography even if you use footnotes in your research paper. The bibliography provides a comprehensive list of all the sources you consulted, while footnotes are used for specific citations or additional information within the text.
1) A thesis is the message of any piece of writing, including both fiction and nonfiction. It's mostly in nonfiction.2) Novels are fiction, they have characters, some real elements, and are book length.3) Footnotes and bibliographies are only in nonfiction.4) A bibliography is where you write down all of your sources, the websites and books you use to get the information that you're using.5) Footnotes are at the bottom of the page for extra information like page numbers and definitions of word on that particular page.
No, but you still need to give the URL
Yes, Chicago style does use footnotes in academic writing to provide citations and additional information.
In APA style, footnotes are not commonly used. Instead, you would typically use in-text citations and a reference list at the end of your paper to cite sources. If you do need to include footnotes, they should be formatted as superscript numbers in the text, with corresponding notes at the bottom of the page.
To use footnotes in APA format, insert a superscript number at the end of the sentence where the footnote is needed. Then, at the bottom of the page, write the corresponding number followed by the footnote information. Make sure to include the author, title, publication date, and any other relevant details.
To use footnotes in APA style, insert a superscript number in the text where the footnote is needed. Then, at the bottom of the page, write the corresponding number followed by the footnote information. Make sure to include the author's name, publication year, title of the source, and page number if applicable.
The key elements of a Chicago style paper include a title page, main body with footnotes or endnotes, and a bibliography. The paper should be double-spaced, with 1-inch margins, and use a readable font like Times New Roman. The title page should include the title, author's name, course information, and date. Footnotes or endnotes should be used to cite sources, and a bibliography should list all sources used in the paper.
They are little cards kinda like notebook paper but shorter in width and hight. (You use them to write a speech on or a bibliography)
To properly write a book bibliography, list the author's last name, first name, book title, publication date, publisher, and page numbers if citing specific information. Use a consistent citation style such as APA or MLA.
To cite a report in Chicago style, include the author's name, report title, publication date, and URL if applicable. Use footnotes or endnotes for in-text citations and include a bibliography at the end of your paper with full citation details.
Most of the time you do. If it wasn't recommended I would do it just to be sure. A properly compiled bibliography shows the readers exactly what books, articles and other materials you have used.