bibliography
Communications
(noun)
A list of books or documents relevant to a particular subject or author.
Writing
Examples of bibliography in the following topics:
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Chicago/Turabian: The Bibliography Section
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Maintaining an Annotated Bibliography
- An annotated bibliography is a list of all your sources, including full citation information and notes on how you will use the sources.
- Annotated bibliographies are useful for several reasons.
- If you keep one while you research, the annotated bibliography will function as a useful guide.
- If you find an annotated bibliography attached to one of the sources you are using, you can look at it to find other possible resources.
- The first part of each entry in an annotated bibliography is the source's full citation.
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Bibliography
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Bibliography
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Research Tips: Start Early, Use a Bibliography, and Evaluate Material Critically
- Start the research process early, consult a bibliography to find credible sources, and evaluate those sources critically.
- Consulting a bibliography will make your research process more efficient.
- Some bibliographies appear as standalone books, while others appear in academic journals or online resources.
- Annotated bibliographies summarize the main argument of each resource.
- However, if the bibliography is old, or if you need the most current information about your topic, you should fill the gap between the end of the bibliography and the present time by looking for articles and books from that time period.
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Chicago/Turabian (NB): The Bibliography Section
- In Chicago NB style, the sources you cite in your paper are listed at the end in the bibliography.
- In Chicago/Turabian papers using the Notes and Bibliography (NB) citation system, all the sources you cite throughout the text of your paper are listed togetherĀ and inĀ full in the bibliography, which comes after the main text of your paper.
- You should first order those articles alphabetically by source title in the bibliography.
- "Bibliography of Published Studies Using the ASEBA."
- This is an example of a correctly formatted bibliography in Chicago/Turabian NB style.
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How to Reference Different Types of Sources in Footnotes
- Footnotes are the preferred citation method for the Chicago/Turabian Notes and Bibliography citation style.
- These footnotes guide the reader to the corresponding entry in your bibliography.
- And remember, this information will also be contained, in a slightly different form, in your bibliography.
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Chicago/Turabian (NB): How to Reference Different Types of Sources
- In Chicago/Turabian NB style, there are different formats for citations in your bibliography depending on the type of source you are citing.
- Now that you know the different components of a book citation in Chicago/Turabian Notes and Bibliography (NB) style and how the citation should be formatted, you will be able to understand the citation formats for other source types.
- List the ways to cite different source types in a Chicago/Turabian bibliography
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Bibliography
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Chicago/Turabian (NB): Footnotes and Endnotes
- In Chicago/Turabian Notes and Bibliography style, use footnotes or endnotes for citing sources in text.
- Fuller information about that source is then contained in the paper's bibliography.
- Think of the footnote as telling the reader where to go in your bibliography to find the source, and the bibliography entry as telling the reader where to go in the real world to find the source.