Footnotes: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Footnotes from Harper & Brothers Revised Old Testament.jpeg|thumb|350px|right|Footnoes from ''Harper & Brothers Revised Old Testament'', 1885]] | [[File:Footnotes from Harper & Brothers Revised Old Testament.jpeg|thumb|350px|right|Footnoes from ''Harper & Brothers Revised Old Testament'', 1885]] | ||
[[File:Footnotes in "The Significance of Early Chemistry".jpeg|thumb| | [[File:Footnotes in "The Significance of Early Chemistry".jpeg|thumb|550px|left|Footnotes in "The Significance of Early Chemistry" by Allen G. Debus in the ''Journal of World History'', 1965]] | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == |
Revision as of 21:26, 5 December 2018
Footnotes
Section 1
There are many different types of typographical notes, including endnote, footnotes, and margin notes. [1]
In the context of history and academics, the footnote is used to both identify both the primary source and proves that the historian or academic has examined all relevant sources and constructed a new argument based on them.
Section 1.A
Section 2
Notes
- ↑ Author, Book, pg.