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A-manual-for-writers-of-research-papers-theses-and-dissertations

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ackets, with a question mark to indicate uncertainty.B: Smith, John. A Book <strong>of</strong> Virtues. Edinburgh, n.d.Miller, Samuel. Another Book <strong>of</strong> Virtues. Boston, [1750?].If a book is under contract with a publisher <strong>and</strong> is already titled, but the date <strong>of</strong> publicationis not yet known, use <strong>for</strong>thcoming in place <strong>of</strong> the date. Treat any book not yet under contractas an unpublished manuscript (see 17.6).N: 91. Jane Q. Author, Book Title (Place <strong>of</strong> Publication: Publisher's Name, <strong>for</strong>thcoming).17.1.7 Page Numbers <strong>and</strong> Other Locating In<strong>for</strong>mationPage numbers <strong>and</strong> other in<strong>for</strong>mation used to identify the location <strong>of</strong> a cited passage orelement generally appear in notes but not in bibliographies.For guidelines on expressing a span <strong>of</strong> numbers, see 23.2.4.PAGE, CHAPTER, AND DIVISION NUMBERS. Page numbers are usually the last element in thecitation <strong>of</strong> a book within a note. Do not include the word page or the abbreviation p. or pp.Use arabic numbers except <strong>for</strong> pages numbered with roman numerals in the original.N: 14. Anne C. Rose, Victorian America <strong>and</strong> the Civil War (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992),145–46.17. Jerome Kagan, “Introduction to the Tenth-Anniversary Edition,” in The Nature <strong>of</strong> the Child (NewYork: Basic Books, 1994), xxii–xxiv.Sometimes a citation refers to a full chapter (abbreviated chap.), part (pt.), book (bk.), orsection (sec.) instead <strong>of</strong> a span <strong>of</strong> page numbers.N: 22. Donald L. Miller, City <strong>of</strong> the Century: The Epic <strong>of</strong> Chicago <strong>and</strong> the Making <strong>of</strong> America (New York:Simon <strong>and</strong> Schuster, 1996), pt. 2.SPECIAL TYPES OF LOCATORS. Some parts <strong>of</strong> a book have special types <strong>of</strong> locators used incitations.Note numbers. Use the abbreviation n (plural, nn) to cite notes. If the note cited is theonly footnote on its page or is an unnumbered footnote, add n after the page number (withno intervening space or punctuation). If there are other notes on the same page as the notecited, list the page number followed by n or (if two or more consecutive notes are cited) nn<strong>and</strong> the note number(s).N: 45. Anthony Grafton, The Footnote: A Curious History (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,1997), 72n.46. Dwight Bolinger, Language: The Loaded Weapon (London: Longman, 1980), 192n23, 192n30,199n14, 201nn16–17.Illustration <strong>and</strong> table numbers. Use the abbreviation fig. <strong>for</strong> figure, but spell out table,map, plate, <strong>and</strong> names <strong>of</strong> other types <strong>of</strong> illustrations. Give the page number be<strong>for</strong>e the

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