

Also, in a sentence, you'd never refer to an author last name first, right? Example: Citing a book PRO TIP: When formatting endnotes/footnotes in Chicago style think of the note as a sentence! The elements of the sentence are separated by commas, not periods, like in the bibliography. If none of those seem to fit, ask your own professor, the history librarian, or consult the Chicago Manual of Style.

Please note that the first reference to a book or periodical is very detailed the second and all subsequent references to the same book or periodical are very brief. The examples on this page provide models for use in your own paper. MLA, APA, and AMA documentation is unacceptable for use in History papers. Chicago style, as found in the Chicago Manual of Style is mandatory the choice between footnotes and endnotes may vary from one professor to another. V0.4 Fixed a problem where the menu wasn't adding the "Run" command.The History Department requires that papers contain endnotes or footnotes for proper documentation. V0.5 Images and Drawings are now retained when converting. V0.5.1 Limit AddOn access to current document only. Thanks to merlinran for providing this update! V0.6 Creating endnotes will now add cross-referenced links. If you have line breaks in your footnotes, only the first paragraph's formatting is kept. V0.6.1 If you have custom formatting in your footnotes, that formatting is maintained when you create the endnotes. If you need to edit after you create the endnotes (adding footnotes, in particular) you need to revert to a previous version to restore the footnotes. This means you cannot go back and add footnotes and rerun the Addon. When your endnotes are created, the original footnote references are lost. This AddOn converts any footnotes you have into endnotes and adds them to the end of the document in order.

Google Docs don't allow you to automatically insert endnotes while writing.
