A footnote is a note of text placed at the bottom of a page in a book or document. The note comments on and may cite a reference for part of the main body of text. A footnote is normally flagged by a superscript number following that portion of the text the note is in reference to.
Occasionally a number between brackets or parentheses, is used instead, thus: *. Typographical devices such as the asterisk (*) or dagger (†) may also be used to point to footnotes. In documents like timetables many different symbols, as well as letters and numbers, may be used to refer the reader to particular footnotes.
Endnotes are similar to footnotes, but differ in that they do not appear at the foot of the particular page, but instead collected together, usually chapter by chapter, appearing as an appendix at the end of the work. Endnotes are generally harder to handle than footnotes, as moving to the appendix every time takes additional time and effort. In fact author and media critic Al Franken alleges that endnotes make it much easier to invent quotations, especially if using lots, as nobody is going to sift through pages of footnotes lacking their context (see also "Infinite Jest" below). Endnotes are often referred to as footnotes.
Academic and scientific works are written by a process of argument. A good argument puts forward a point of view that is well grounded: it has evidence to support it. Scholars use footnotes and/or endnotes for a variety of reasons including:
Associate Justice Stephen Breyer of the Supreme Court of the United States is famous in the American legal community for his writing style, in which he never uses footnotes. He prefers to keep all citations inline (which is permitted in American legal citation).
Fußnote | הערת שוליים | Voetnoot | Footnot | Przypis | Fotnot
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