The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
You can create a secondary (short) citation of an item once a primary
(long) citation is created by using the table of authorities feature in
Word 6.0 and higher. The short citation is used for all cases, statutes, or
other sources you already referred to in a long citation.
MORE INFORMATIONOnly long citations appear in a table of authorities. Only the page numbers for the short citations will appear, if the short citation is on a different page than the long citation. Here is an example of a long and short citation: Long --> Brown v. Board of Education, 273 US 177, 93 F2d 14 (1953)If the long citations is on page 1, and the short citation is on page 2, the table of authorities would look something like this:
REFERENCESWord 97For additional help, click the Office Assistant, type "How do I create a Table of Authority," and click Search.Word 7.0For additional help, click Answer Wizard on the Help menu, and search on the words "How do I create a Table of Authority."Word 6.0For additional help, click "Search for Help on" on the Help menu, and search on the words "Table of Authorities." Select "Table of Authorities" from the Index list and click Display."Microsoft Word User's Guide," version 6.0, pages 462-468 Additional query words: winword 7.00a word95 word7 word6 6.00a 6.00c missing lost page secondary short citation long table of authorities ta field toa word97
Keywords : kbfield |
Last Reviewed: December 29, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |