Turabian-NB-format-for-All-Students-9th-Ed-Combined-FINAL-1.pdf

NOTE: Content highlighted in green throughout should NOT be included in any student’s

paper. Such content is included herein as flags to note and bring attention to special rules.

Prepared by Christy Owen, Liberty University’s Online Writing Center, [email protected]

LIBERTY UNIVERSITY

JOHN W. RAWLINGS SCHOOL OF DIVINITY

A Sample Paper for the Purpose of Correct Formatting In

Notes-Bibliography Style for All Students Using Turabian Format

Submitted to Dr. Full M. Name

in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the completion of

OBST 515

Old Testament Orientation I

by

Claudia S. Sample

August 5, 2020

ii

Contents

(not Table of Contents)

Only include in graduate/doctoral level papers; shown here for ease of access and visualization

Introduction ................................................................................................................................. 1

Ibid. ............................................................................................................................................... 3

Basic Formatting ......................................................................................................................... 4

Overview ............................................................................................................................. 4

Title Page ............................................................................................................................ 5

Page Numbering.................................................................................................................. 5

Table of Contents ................................................................................................................ 5

Thesis Statements................................................................................................................ 6

Capitalization ...................................................................................................................... 8

Chapters versus Subheadings .............................................................................................. 8

Contemporary Art (First-level)................................................................................................ 10

What Are the Major Styles? (Second-level) ..................................................................... 10

Abstract Expressionism (Third-level) ................................................................... 10

Major painters and practitioners (Fourth-level) ................................................... 10

Pollack as the leader (Fifth-level). .......................................................... 10

“Voice” and Tense ............................................................................................................ 10

Organizing a Paper Using an Outline ..................................................................................... 11

Quotations and Paraphrases .................................................................................................... 11

Citations ..................................................................................................................................... 12

iii

Special Applications .................................................................................................................. 17

Examples of Citing the Bible ............................................................................................ 17

Map, Photography, Figure, or Table ................................................................................. 19

Crediting Authors of Chapters in Edited Collections ....................................................... 19

Numbering ........................................................................................................................ 19

Permalinks......................................................................................................................... 20

Turabian – Videos ............................................................................................................. 20

Turabian – Ebooks with No Page Numbers ...................................................................... 20

Bibliography Entries and Tips ................................................................................................. 21

Conclusion .................................................................................................................................. 22

Bibliography .............................................................................................................................. 27

1

Introduction

“Turabian” style is an abbreviated version of the more-comprehensive “Chicago” style.

Turabian is named for Kate L. Turabian, the author of A Manual for Writers of Research Papers,

Thesis, and Dissertations: Chicago Style for Students & Researchers, which is currently in its

9th printed edition.1 This sample paper will strive to provide students with all the foundational

elements of a Turabian paper using the Notes-Bibliography format for students majoring in

History, (some) Government, and Divinity programs of study. All class assignments will follow

the Notes-Bibliography format except book reviews, which use the Author-Date format (see

the Author-Date section of the OWC’s Turabian Quick Guide for resources on that format).

Many incoming students have opted not to purchase the Turabian manual; this can have

significant negative effects on those students’ ability to learn and master Turabian format.

Fortunately, Liberty University subscribes to the Chicago Manual of Style (CMOS) database in

its Online Library for those students who do not have a current Turabian manual readily

available to them. Since the Turabian manual is the official resource commonly used in

academia, the Online Writing Center (OWC) strongly encourages students to buy the current

Turabian manual (about $10 for hard copy or electronic version). This sample paper, however,

includes references to the correlating CMOS section(s), delineated by red hyperlinked text to

denote the relevant CMOS section, in an effort to ensure all Liberty University students have the

necessary resources to excel academically. It is not proper to include hyperlinks or colored

lettering in academic class papers; those are merely included here for ease-of-access purposes.

1 Kate L. Turabian, A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations, 9th ed. (Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 2018).

2

This paper will focus primarily on the stylistic elements discussed in Chapters 16 and 17

of the Turabian manual2 —with some minor revisions.3 Students will need to incorporate proper

grammatical elements to their papers as well, but those will not be addressed in detail herein.

It is important to delineate that undergraduate students will not use headings,

subheadings, or a contents page in most of their class papers. Graduate and doctoral students

are recommended to include these elements for any paper with at least ten pages in the body,

and required to do so in all papers with twenty or more pages in the body. Those elements are

all included and illustrated throughout this sample paper for organization and ease-of-access

purposes, but students should adhere to the parameters in their specific class assignment to

determine whether or not they should include subheadings (and a contents page, when

appropriate) in that class paper and use the appropriate template provided on the OWC’s

Turabian Quick Guide page.

Many students’ papers will require an introductory section that summarizes or previews

the argument of the whole paper, though this is not universally required for all papers.4 It should

be set apart as a separate First-Level Subheading (addressed below). Leave one double-spaced

line beneath the word Introduction and the text that follows, as shown above.5 Turabian suggests

that “most introductions run about 10 percent of the whole.”6 She also suggests that conclusions

are typically shorter than introductions.

2 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 149-235.

3 For example, footnote numbers in standard Turabian are not superscripted and are followed by a period

(pages 149-50, 162, and 406 of the Turabian manual), but Liberty University programs require superscripted

numbers with no periods, as depicted throughout this paper.

4 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 400, 402.

5 Ibid., 402.

6 Ibid., 107.

3

Ibid.

The abbreviation ibid. is used in most cases to refer to “the same” source cited

immediately before on the same page7—in this case, footnotes #5 and #6 on the prior page. One

of the changes in the 9th edition of the Turabian manual was to discourage the use of the term

ibid. However, all schools and departments within Liberty University have universally decided to

continue to require and encourage its use at this time, as it is a long-used historical term that will

occur in many scholarly resources printed prior to 2018, including most seminal works. As such,

students are instructed to disregard Turabian’s 2018 position on the use of ibid. for all Liberty

University coursework.

The term ibid. itself is a Latin abbreviation (which is why it is italicized in the text of a

sentence), so do include the period. Capitalize it when it begins the footnote, since it depicts the

beginning of a sentence, but do not italicize the term in notes.8 If the page numbers for that

footnote and the one preceding it differ, use Ibid. followed by a comma and the correct page

number(s), as shown in footnotes #5 and #6 on the previous page. If the page number is the same

for both the current footnote and the one that precedes it, simply use the word Ibid. for that

second footnote, as shown in footnote #8 below.

Liberty University’s History Department allows students to carry forward the use of

ibid. onto subsequent pages as long as there are no other sources cited between them. For

all other students, however, each new page of a student’s paper restarts the requirements, so the

first footnoted citation to a source on each page would include the author’s name and a shortened

title (if previously cited), then students can resume using ibid. for subsequent consecutive

7 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 166-67.

8 Ibid.

4

citations on that page, as shown in footnotes #8 above and #12 below. Standard Turabian format

allows two forms of shortened notes,9 but Liberty University programs of study require the

author-title version that includes both the author’s name and a shortened version of the source’s

title. Footnote #11 below (and the first footnote on each new page referring to the Turabian

manual) depicts a shortened note—where the author’s name is given, along with a few words of

the title. Always include the page number, whether using a full footnote or a shortened note.

Basic Formatting

Overview

Turabian generally offers writers great flexibility in the choices they make regarding

many stylistic elements.10 However, Liberty University’s schools and departments have adopted

specific requirements as detailed herein. General formatting elements11 required include:

 One-inch margins on all four sides of the paper.

 Liberty University requires Times New Roman size 12-pt. font for all content in the

paper itself, except Times New Roman 10-pt. font for all footnote content.

 Double-spacing throughout the body of the paper, except in the footnotes, block quotes,

table titles, and figure captions. Lists in appendices should be single-spaced, too.12

 Quotations should be blocked if the citation is five or more lines.

9 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 164-66.

10 For example, Turabian does not specify a font size or style, although all programs of study at Liberty

University using Turabian require Times New Romans, 12-point font. Many other elements are also left by Turabian

up to individual writers; the OWC has incorporated its own educated judgment for those in this sample paper, but

students have freedom to stray from those, where permitted in the Turabian manual.

11 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 384-87.

12 Ibid., 385.

5

Title Page

The Turabian manual provides two different examples and details for the title page

format options.13 Liberty University has adopted the more formal one, as shown in this sample

paper and in the templates provided to students.

Page Numbering

The title page should not include any page number,14 although it is considered the first

page of any paper. The front matter (anything between the title page and the first page of the

body of the paper) should be numbered with lowercase Roman numerals centered in the footer,

beginning with ii, to correspond with the fact that it begins on page two.15 The paper’s body,

bibliography, and appendices display Arabic numerals (i.e., 1, 2, 3) placed flush-right in the

header, beginning with page 1 on the first page of the body of the paper.16 Liberty University

now offers students templates that are already formatted with pagination, margin, font, etc.

Table of Contents

Although this page/section is commonly referred to as the “table of contents,” only the

word “Contents” should appear at the top, centered, without the quotation marks.17 Students may

not need a table of contents, but one was included in this sample paper as a visual aid, and

because it is lengthy enough to include subheadings. Liberty University assignments will specify

if students are required to include subheadings and/or a contents page. Generally, subheadings

13 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 391-92.

14 Ibid., 385.

15 Ibid., 386.

16 Ibid., 386.

17 Ibid., 390, 394-395.

6

and a contents page are required for assignments with twenty pages or more of content, and both

are encouraged for assignments of ten to nineteen pages of content.

The table of contents can span more than one page when necessary, as it does in this

sample paper. Double-space between each item but single-space the individual items themselves.

Add an extra line between each of the major sections (including the front and back matter). It is

important to note that a table of contents does not list the pages that precede it; only those pages

that follow it. Be sure that the first letter of each word is capitalized (other than articles and

prepositions within the phrase).

“Leaders” —the dots between the words on the left margin and their corresponding page

numbers at the right margin in a table of contents—are acceptable. Only include the first page

each element begins on; not the full page-span.18 MS Word will automatically populate this.

Number all pages of this element with Roman numerals. If the table of contents is more

than one page, do not repeat the title. Leave two blank lines between the title and the first listed

item.19 Single-space individual items listed but add a blank line after each item. Between the lists

for the front and back matter and the chapters, or between parts or volumes (if any), leave two

blank lines. This video tutorial shows how to format subheadings and convert those into a

Contents page for larger projects.

Thesis Statements

Section A.2.1.4 of the Turabian manual discusses the placement and labeling of an

abstract or thesis statement. Specifically, it acknowledges that “most departments or universities

18 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 390.

19 Ibid.

7

have specific models … that you should follow exactly for content, word count, format,

placement, and pagination.”20 This paper does not include a separate sample thesis statement

page; some classes will require such. Do not confuse a purpose statement with a thesis statement,

however. A purpose statement states the reason why the paper is written. For all practical

purposes, the purpose statement introduces the thesis statement. An example of a purpose

statement is, “The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that when one recognizes God’s

freedom, he/she can find biblical inerrancy defensible.” An example of a thesis statement is,

“Biblical inerrancy is defensible in the context of divine freedom.” Remember, the purpose and

thesis statements determine the form and content of an outline.

The distinction between a purpose statement and a thesis statement is important. The

purpose of this sample paper is to provide a template for the correct formatting of a research

paper. The thesis is, “Students who use this paper as a sample or template are more likely to

format their papers correctly in the future.”

Line Spacing

Section A.1.3 of the Turabian manual addresses line spacing.21 As mentioned above, all

text in papers should be double-spaced except for block quotes, table titles, figure captions, and

lists in appendices. The table of contents, footnotes, and bibliography entries should be single-

spaced internally, but double-spaced between each entry.22 Turabian specifies in Section A.2.2.4

to “put more space before a subheading than after.”23 Liberty University recommends adding an

20 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 389.

21 Ibid., 385.

22 Ibid., 385.

23 Ibid., 404.

8

extra single-spaced line before each subheading, so the total space between the end of one

section and the next subheading should be the equivalent of three single-spaced lines (or one-

and-a-half double-spaced lines); this is demonstrated throughout this sample paper and pre-

programmed into the Turabian templates. For those students who wish to learn how to format

this element themselves, see the tutorial on formatting subheadings. There should only be one

space after periods and other punctuation at the end of each sentence, before beginning a new

sentence.24

Capitalization

Turabian style has two forms of capitalization for titles: headline-style and sentence-style.

In headline style, all major words in a title (usually those with four or more letters, excepting

prepositions) begin with capital letters.25 In sentence-style, only the first word of a title, the first

word of a subtitle, and proper nouns begin with capital letters.26 Liberty University courses use

headline style for subheadings.

Chapters versus Subheadings

Turabian allows each writer to determine whether to use subheadings or chapters to

divide his or her paper into sections.27 There are separate rules for both. Chapters are usually

reserved for thesis projects and dissertations; subheadings are often used for class papers of

24 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 385.

25 Ibid., 325-26.

26 Ibid., 326.

27 Ibid., 402, 404.

9

graduate and doctoral students. Class assignments will specify whether subheadings are

permitted or required.

Turabian allows great flexibility and individuality in how one formats the various

subheading levels, when used. Liberty University has adopted the format for heading levels

shown herein, for the sake of consistency and uniformity.

The title of a heading should never be “orphaned” at the bottom of a page, without its

supporting text.28 If there is not enough room on the previous page for both the heading title and

at least the first line of the paragraph, begin a new page. Authors can, however, have two

headings in a row29 as shown on page 17 below. The formats used and recommended in this

sample paper reflect that:

1. First-level headings should be centered, bolded, and use headline-style capitalization.

2. Second-level subheadings should be centered, not bolded, and use headline-style

capitalization.

3. Third-level subheadings should be left-justified, bolded, and use headline-style

capitalization.

4. Fourth-level subheadings—though rare in Turabian style—should be left-justified, not

bolded, with only the first letter of the first word capitalized.

5. Fifth-level subheadings are extremely rare; they should be indented ½” from the left

margin, not bolded, italicized, in sentence case (including a period), followed by one

space, with the text following on the same line.

28 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 405.

29 Ibid., 404.

10

Except for fifth-levels, all text would begin on the line beneath the heading. Note that

there must be at least two of any subheading used under a larger heading.30 Turabian also does

not allow orphaned headings, where the heading appears at the bottom of the page, isolated from

its content on the next page.31 First- and second-level subheading levels are used throughout this

sample paper, but below is a visualization of each of five levels.

Contemporary Art (First-level)

What Are the Major Styles? (Second-level)

Abstract Expressionism (Third-level)

Major painters and practitioners (Fourth-level)

Pollack as the leader (Fifth-level). This one is unique in that the text begins on the same

line.

“Voice” and Tense

As a general rule, use active voice and avoid first person (I, me, we, us, our) or second

person (you, your) pronouns in academic writing unless permitted by the assignment

instructions. This paper uses third person (one, this author). In historical writing, use simple past

tense verbs, but when referring to an author’s written work, use present tense.

30 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 404.

31 Ibid., 405.

11

Organizing a Paper Using an Outline

When writing a paper, students should organize their outline first so that they are able to

plan how they will make their argument and then give their reasoning and evidence to support

their thesis statement. The first paragraph of each section should explain how this will fit into the

author’s reasoning, and then each section will end with a summary of how the evidence has

shown such reasoning to be correct. Also, transitions are very helpful at the end of each major

section so that the reader anticipates how the next section is connected to the logical progression

of the reasoning the author uses to support his or her thesis.

Liberty University undergraduate papers will generally be less than ten or twelve pages

and most will not use subheading levels or a contents page at all (unless specified in the

instructions); most Liberty University graduate and doctoral research papers will be no longer

than twenty pages and generally will not have long and detailed outlines or subheadings beyond

the third level.32 Details that would be appropriate for the fourth or fifth heading level tend to

distract the reader’s attention from the overall thesis within a short essay (typically fewer than 20

pages). Even if a fourth level is unavoidable, a fifth level is discouraged.

Quotations and Paraphrases

All content gleaned from another source will be presented as either a quote or a

paraphrase. A paraphrase means that the original wording has been change sufficiently into the

student’s own words while keeping the same meaning (not simply just rearranging the order of

the words or replacing only a few of them); a direct quote means that the words are used

verbatim, which requires quotation marks. Both require a citation with a page number to the

32 Papers with ten to nineteen pages in the body are recommended to include subheadings and a contents

page; those with twenty pages or more are required to do so; the instructions will specify what is required.

12

original source. Quotes with four or fewer lines of text in the student’s paper will be incorporated

into the text of the paragraph, as has been demonstrated herein (such as the bottom of the first

paragraph on page ten).

Quotes that span five lines or more, however, must be block quoted. Blocked quotations

are single-spaced with one blank line before and after each excerpt, and the entire left margin of

the block quote is indented one half-inch. No quotation marks are used when using a blocked

quotation, but do use them if it contains an internal quote. Turabian requires blocked quotes to be

introduced in the writer’s own words.33 For example, Jackson evokes the supremacy of home:

Housing is an outward expression of the inner human nature; no society can be fully

understood apart from the residences of its members. A nineteenth-century melody

declares, “There’s no place like home,” and even though she had Emerald City at her

feet, Dorothy could think of no place she would rather be than at home in Kansas. Our

home are our havens from the world.34

Citations

All content that is taken from another source must include a citation, whether direct-

quoted or paraphrased. Though Turabian allows two forms of citing sources in the body of a

paper, this sample paper focuses exclusively on the notes-bibliography style. Chapters 16 and 17

of the Turabian manual focus on these elements (Chapter 14 in the CMOS). The “N” denotes

(foot)notes, and the “B” denotes bibliography entries. Be sure to use the correct format for each

since there are some variances between them for each resource. Notably, the first/only author’s

name is inverted (i.e., last name first) in bibliography entries, but not in notes.35

33 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 361.

34 Kenneth T. Jackson, Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States (New York: Oxford

Press, 1985), 3.

35 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 154.

13

When formatting a footnote, indent the first line of each footnote the same amount as the

first line of the paragraphs within the paper (1/2”). The indentation should be before the

superscripted footnote number. Insert one space after the superscript number before the first

word of the footnote.36 The footnotes should be single-spaced, and there should be a single blank

space between (or 12-pt. line space after) each footnote.37 Font within the footer should be 10

point (the OWC recommends Times New Roman, 10-pt.).

There is one notable exclusion to notes formatting that most Liberty University students

will encounter. The version or translation of the Bible being used must be identified in the text

with a parenthetical reference (e.g., 1 Cor 1:13, ESV).38 If an author chooses to use the same

Bible translation (such as the English Standard Version) throughout the paper, he or she should

add a footnote in the first usage stating, “Unless otherwise noted, all biblical passages referenced

are in the English Standard Version.” This means that that author will not need to reference the

version of the Bible in subsequent citations unless he or she changes the version (otherwise, each

citation must also include a footnote entry crediting the source). For example, if the student

identified the English Standard Version as the primary version but chose to use the New

International Version (NIV) when quoting a particular verse such as John 14:6, the parenthetical

citation following the passage would be (John 14:6, NIV).

36 This rule is specific to Liberty University. In standard Turabian, the footnote number is not superscripted,

and it is followed by a period.

37 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 162.

38 Ibid., 204; see also section 24.6.

14

When citing one source quoted in another, Turabian encourages students to go to the

original source and cite it directly.39 In those cases where the original cannot be located or

accessed, cite both resources as detailed in Section 17.9.3.

An example of each of the major types of footnoted resources is included herein for

sample purposes. Note that writers would only include footnotes and bibliography entries for

resources whose content was actually used in supporting the author’s position in a paper. Note

also that author names are never inverted in notes. These samples that follow are for illustration

purposes only, and each source footnoted herein is also included in the bibliography section. See

the Chart of Turabian Citations to show correlating note and bibliography entries, side by side,

for each major type of resource.

 Book by one author.40

 Book by two authors.41

 Book by three authors.42

 Book by four or more authors (modify the note only to name the first author followed by et al. In the bibliography entry, however, list all authors if a resource

has four to ten authors, or up to the first seven authors followed by et al. if the

resource has more than ten authors).43

 Editor, translator, or compiler instead of author.44

 Editor, translator, or compiler in addition to author.45

39 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 205.

40 Wendy Doniger, Splitting the Difference (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999), 65.

41 David Baggett and Jerry L. Walls, Good God: The Theistic Foundations of Morality (New York: Oxford

University Press, 2011), 110.

42 Walder Frey, Roose Bolton, and Tywin Lannister, Wedding Planning in Westeros (King's Landing:

Castamere Publishing, 2013), 300.

43 Mark Orphen et al., Flying Like Eagles (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018), 8-9.

44 Richmond Lattimore, trans., The Iliad of Homer (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951), 91–92.

45 Jovi Rockwell, The Stray Cats of Lynchburg: A Guide to Cat Identification, ed. Chris M. Schulz (Lynchburg, VA: Warwick House Publishing, 2006), 56.

15

 Chapter or other part of a book.46

 Preface, foreword, introduction, or similar part of a book.47

 Book published electronically.48, 49

 Kindle or e-reader Book (no page numbers).50,51

 Article in a print journal.52, 53

 Article in an online journal.54,55, 56, 57

 Popular magazine article.58

46 Andrew Wiese, “‘The House I Live In’: Race, Class, and African American Suburban Dreams in the

Postwar United States,” in The New Suburban History, ed. Kevin M. Kruse and Thomas J. Sugrue (Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 2006), 101–2.

47 James Rieger, introduction to Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982), xx–xxi.

48 Kelsie Bacon, How to Get Famous: The Importance of a Delicious Last Name (New York: Fake

Publishing Publishers, 2013), 41, ProQuest Ebrary.

49 Note: if the book is a PDF of a hard-copy publication, do not include the web address (URL); cite it as if you are holding it in your hand. If a book is available in more than one format, cite the version you consulted. For

books consulted online, include a URL. If the book was consulted in a library or commercial database, give the

name of the database instead of a URL.

50 Dave Earley and Rod Dempsey, Disciple Making Is … : How to Live the Great Commission with Passion and Confidence (Nashville: B&H Publishers, 2013), Chapter 2, “Start with Clarity,” para.1, Kindle.

51 If the publication is in digitized form and does not have page numbers reflecting the actual pages in the

book, include a section title or a chapter or other number in place of the page number, as shown in the previous

footnote.

52 John Maynard Smith, “The Origin of Altruism,” Nature 393, no. 2 (April 1998): 639.

53 Note: if the journal has more than one issue per year—i.e., (April 1998)—put the month before the date.

54 Mark A. Hlatky et al., "Quality-of-Life and Depressive Symptoms in Postmenopausal Women after

Receiving Hormone Therapy: Results from the Heart and Estrogen/Progestin Replacement Study (HERS) Trial,"

Journal of the American Medical Association 287, no. 5 (February 2002): page #s or chapter if page numbers are not

available, https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/194612.

55 For a journal article consulted online, include a URL. For articles that include a DOI, form the URL by appending the DOI to http:// dx.doi.org/ rather than using the URL in the address bar. If the article was consulted in

a library or commercial database, give the name of the database instead.

56 Kenneth T. Jackson, "All the World's a Mall: Reflections on the Social and Economic Consequences of

the American Shopping Center," American Historical Review (October 1996): 1111-1121.

57 Kenneth T. Jackson, "Reflections on the Consolidation of New York," New York Law School Law

Review XLII (1998): 713-721.

58 Steve Martin, “Sports-Interview Shocker,” New Yorker, May 6, 2002, 84.

16

 Newspaper article.59

 Book review.60

 Thesis or dissertation.61

 Interview.62, 63

 Lecture.64

 Paper and/or PowerPoint presented at a meeting or conference, or in class (unpublished).65

 Letter in a print collection.66

 Document in a print collection.67

 Information from a website.68

 Unpublished photograph held by an author (exclude from bibliography).69

 Videos and podcasts.70

59 William S. Niederkorn, “A Scholar Recants on His ‘Shakespeare’ Discovery,” New York Times, June 20,

2002, Arts section, Midwest edition, B122.

60 James Gorman, “Endangered Species,” review of The Last American Man, by Elizabeth Gilbert, New York Times Book Review, June 2, 2002, 16.

61 A. Chadwick Thornhill, “To the Jew First: A Socio-Historical and Biblical-Theological Analysis of the

Pauline Teaching of ‘Election’ in Light of Second Temple Jewish Patterns of Thought.” PhD diss., Liberty Baptist

Theological Seminary, 2013.

62 Professor of History Samuel C. Smith at Liberty University, interview by author, Lynchburg, VA,

February 9, 2016.

63 Ordinarily, “unpublished interviews (including those the author has conducted him/herself) should

usually be cited only in notes” (Turabian 2018, 197). The bibliography section of this paper, however, includes an

example of how to format an interview entry when necessary.

64 Robert Ritchie, “Vietnam: Lessons from the War” (video lecture in HIUS 500 at Liberty University,

Lynchburg, VA, March 19, 2016).

65 Brian Doyle, “Howling Like Dogs: Metaphorical Language in Psalm 59” (paper presented at the annual international meeting for the Society of Biblical Literature, Berlin, Germany, June 19–22, 2002).

66 George Whitefield to Mr. I. Roberts, July 18, 1740, The Works of the Reverend George Whitefield, vol. 1 (London: Printed for Edward and Charles Dilly, 1771), 199-200.

67 Egerton Leigh, The Man Unmasked: or, the World Undeceived in the Author of a Late Pamphlet, Intitled, ‘Extracts from the Proceedings of the High Court of Vice-Admiralty in Charlestown, South-Carolina,’ &c

with Suitable Remarks on that Masterly Performance in Philip Hamer, et al., eds., The Papers of Henry Laurens,

vol. 6 (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1969-2003), 19-23.

68 Silas Deane to Elizabeth Deane, (Letter 16) 7 September 1774, Delegates to Congress: Letters of

Delegates to Congress, 1774-1789, vol. 1, August 1774-August 1775, Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia

Library, 35, http://etext.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/DelVol01.html.

69 Carolyn Curtis, Farm Work, September 8, 1999, Shreeve, OH, in author’s possession.

70 Andrew Hanon, “Never Give Up” (music video), directed by Patrick Keene, October 2, 2011, 4:25,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=abcdeQWver.

17

 Publications of Government Departments and Agencies—Census.71

 Reference works (omit from Bibliography).72

Special Applications

Examples of Citing the Bible

Many students struggle with the proper formatting in citing the Bible. When citing

biblical passages, there are some general guidelines to follow that are important. It is not

necessary to write out full quotes of verses or paragraphs from the Bible since readers can find

the references that are cited. Citations are quoted in full when the author needs to make a specific

observation, such as when he/she chooses to follow Luke’s example in his message to

Theophilus; “so that you may know the exact truth about the things you have been taught” (Luke

1:4).73 Notice in footnote #73 below that only a single footnote is needed when identifying the

Bible version, providing the paper cites from only one translation (and Turabian has a rule in

section 22.3.2.3 that explicitly advises not to italicize Bible versions). All the following biblical

references are given in the text of the paper, not in the footnotes, unless content in the footnote

requires biblical references. If an author uses multiple translations or versions of the Bible, then

he or she would have to use one footnote for each new version and use a system of abbreviations

in the text, but only within parentheses (NASB, KJV, NIV, etc.). The writing is simplified if the

71 National Archives and Records Administration, Department of Commerce—Bureau of the Census:

Fourteenth Census of the United States: 1920, Famous and Infamous Census Records, Politicians and Public

Servants, 1920.

72 Peloubet’s Bible Dictionary, 6th ed., s.v. “Romans, Epistle to the.”

73 Unless otherwise noted, all biblical passages referenced are in the English Standard Version (Wheaton,

IL: Crossway, 2008).

18

author chooses one version of the Bible and uses it exclusively; then he or she can provide a

disclaimer footnote to that effect as stated in footnote #73.

In the actual text of a paper, be sure to follow proper grammatical and style requirements.

Here are some correct examples of how to cite references or allusions from the Bible. Luke

wrote to Theophilus in verse four of his first chapter so that his patron would have a more exact

understanding of the details of the salvation offered also to the Gentiles. Luke claims that he

wrote his Gospel, “in consecutive order,” after having “investigated everything carefully from

the beginning” (Luke 1:3). In verse one of Chapter One, Luke seems to be aware of previous

Gospel accounts, but in Luke 1:2, he claims that he has information from eyewitnesses. Note in

the previous example that authors are permitted to use standard biblical references like Luke 1:2

within a sentence as long as it is introduced as a biblical reference rather than as part of the text

of that paper.

The abbreviations for the books of the Bible can be used only in parentheses within the

text or in footnotes.74 For example, an author may make a reference to Romans 1:16, but if he or

she states that Christians should not be ashamed of the gospel (Rom 1:16), then the author should

use the abbreviation within parentheses. The following examples are all correct: Paul, in verse

sixteen of Chapter One of his Epistle to the Romans, states that he is not ashamed of the gospel;

Paul states that he is not ashamed of the gospel (Rom 1:16); and in Romans 1:16, Paul states that

he is not ashamed of the gospel.75

74 Turabian includes a comprehensive list of abbreviations for the books of the Bible in sections 24.6.1-

24.6.4. Liberty University, however, requires its students to use the Bible abbreviations as itemized in the Sacred

Book Reference List and Capitalization Glossary.

75 Notice the word “gospel” is not capitalized when referring to the evangelical message (i.e. “good news”).

It is capitalized when referring to one of the first four books of the New Testament, however.

19

Map, Photography, Figure, or Table

When referring to a map, photograph, figure, or table, it must be cited in the footnotes,

according to Turabian 17.1.7.2.76 For example:

2 R. Alan Culpepper, “Luke,” in The New Interpreter's Bible, Vol. 9, eds. Leander E.

Keck, et al. (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1995), 89, table 6.4.

Crediting Authors of Chapters in Edited Collections

In Turabian format, authors are required to credit the author of each individual chapter of

an edited collection that they gleaned material from; each of those would be individual

references. See section 17.1.8.2 of the Turabian manual.77

Numbering

Any number used in the text that is less than one hundred and any whole number of

hundreds should be spelled completely within the body of the paper (one hundred, two hundred,

etc.).78, 79 Generally, if the number can be written with one or two words, it should be spelled

completely. For numbers written with more than two words (i.e., 108 or 210), numerals should

be used. However, one should never mix the styles. If any number used must be written with

numerals, then all should be in the same style (i.e., 98, 108, 210, 300; not ninety-eight, 108, 210,

three hundred). Of note here is an exception that when writing percentages in the text, write 98

percent or 100 percent, and so forth;80 always using the numeral, but writing out “percent.”

76 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 182.

77 Ibid., 184.

78 Ibid., 330-31.

79 The exception is within a footnote where all numeric numerals can be used (e.g. 100, 200, etc.).

80 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 332.

20

Permalinks

Some resources have permalinks available. They may appear as a paperclip or linked-

chains icon, or by the word Permalink. This webpage explains more. The age of internet

technology has significantly increased the number of resources available online, which trend is

expected to continue. URLs based on DOIs are most reliable; use those whenever possible. If

there is no DOI-based URL, use a permalink when available.81 If one cannot find a viable URL

that does not require log-on credentials, then omit the URL altogether and substitute the name of

the database (i.e., ProQuest).82

Turabian – Videos

Formatting of videos and podcasts (such as used in Liberty University course lectures) in

notes-bibliography style is addressed in section 17.10.3.3 of the Turabian manual.83 See the

examples in footnotes #64-65 above as well.

Turabian – Ebooks with No Page Numbers

Section 17.1.10 addresses electronic books, or ebooks.84 The bottom paragraph of that

section has all the specifics, including not citing app-specific location numbers, but instead citing

the details necessary for the reader to locate that content in any version of that resource (i.e.,

chapter or section name or number). See footnotes #48-51 above.

81 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 145.

82 Ibid.

83 Ibid., 210.

84 Ibid., 186.

21

Bibliography Entries and Tips

The bibliography list itself begins on a new page following the Conclusion, even though

a great deal of room may be left on a final page. To do this, hold down the “Ctrl” key and then

hit the “Enter” key, which will drop the cursor down to an entirely new page to start the

bibliography. Type the word Bibliography, centered, in bold type, followed by one blank line.

The bibliography is single-spaced but with an extra blank line (or 12-pt line space) inserted

between each entry. Chapter 17 of the Turabian manual is dedicated to the various forms of

bibliographic entries.85

The following depicts a bullet list summary of bibliography rules and parameters:

 Use the term Bibliography for the final list of bibliographic entries. Other terms such as

References or Works Cited are not acceptable.

 Bold the title, center it, and begin a new page with normal page numbering.

 Use a one-half inch hanging indention for the second+ line(s) of each.

 Use single-line spacing between (or 12-pt. line spacing after) entries.

 Only cite sources directly referenced in the body of the paper. Do not cite works that

have only been consulted. For every bibliography entry, there should be a footnote and

vice-versa.

 When including two or more works from the same author in the bibliography, Liberty

University has opted to use eight underscore lines (________) in place of the author’s

name for the second+ bibliography entries. There are three resources by Kenneth T.

Jackson in the bibliography list of this paper. The first includes his name; the second and

third have the underscored lines in place of that.

 Break the URL at a logical breaking point (after a period, /, etc.) to go to the next line. Do

this by placing the cursor where it should break, then click Ctrl-Enter.

 When consulting an anthology where all the chapters are written by different authors,

insert the inclusive page numbers of that particular chapter in the bibliographic entry. If

citing from a book within a collection of books, also insert the inclusive page numbers of

that particular book in the bibliographic entry.

 When citing an article from an online library/search engine, authors do not need to cite

the search engine or article address if the article is in the same form as it would have been

in a print journal (typically this can be discerned as the case if the online article is

downloadable into a .pdf). If one does need to cite the link to the article, it is preferred to

cite the article using the Digital Object Identifier (DOI). If no DOI is available, make sure

to use a permalink rather than a link copied and pasted from the web browser’s address

bar. When signed into the Liberty University Jerry Falwell Library online using a

85 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 169-222.

22

username and password, then the address from the address bar will not work for anyone

who does not have a Liberty University username/password.

 Italicize book titles; use quotation marks for article titles.

 Do not include the Bible in the bibliography. Since the Bible is considered a sacred work,

cite it initially in the footnotes and subsequently in parenthetical references. For example,

note the parenthetical reference in the following sentence: Christ declares his exclusive

salvific value when he states, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6). The

Bible reference is not included within the quotation marks because it is not a part of

Christ’s declaration. The period would come after the parenthesis because one cannot

begin a new sentence without a period immediately preceding it.

Conclusion

The conclusion of a paper in Turabian style should reiterate the thesis (though not

necessarily verbatim) and provide the audience with a concise summary of all the major points.86

The importance of an effective conclusion cannot be overstated, as it frames the writer’s closing

thoughts and should provide a lasting impression on the reader.

This is the last page of text in the body of the paper. Even though it only covers the first

half of the page, drop down to the next page before beginning the bibliography. We invite

Liberty University’s online students to take advantage of the OWC’s tutor-review services once

they have their drafts written: https://www.liberty.edu/online/casas/writing-center/ — click on

the drop-down arrow next to Draft Reviews, then scroll down through the new content that pops

up to the link to Request Tutoring.

86 Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 111.

27

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Publishing Publishers, 2013. ProQuest Ebrary.

Baggett, David, and Jerry L. Walls. Good God: The Theistic Foundations of Morality. New

York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

Curtis, Carolyn. Farm Work. September 8, 1999. Shreve, OH. In author’s possession.

Delegates to Congress: Letters of Delegates to Congress, 1774-1789. Vol. 1. August 1774-

August 1775. Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library. http://etext.

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Doniger, Wendy. Splitting the Difference. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999.

Doyle, Brian. “Howling Like Dogs: Metaphorical Language in Psalm 59.” Paper presented at the

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19–22, 2002.

Earley, Dave, and Rod Dempsey. Disciple Making Is . . . : How to Live the Great Commission

with Passion and Confidence. Nashville: B&H Publishers, 2013, Kindle.

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Landing: Castamere Publishing, 2013.Gorman, James. “Endangered Species.” Review of

The Last American Man, by Elizabeth Gilbert. New York Times Book Review, June 2,

2002.

Hamer, Philip, et al., eds. The Papers of Henry Laurens, 16 Vols. Columbia, SC: University of

South Carolina Press, 1969-2003.

Hlatky, Mark A., Derek Boothroyd, Eric Vittinghoff, Penny Sharp, and Mary A. Whooley.

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Jackson, Kenneth T. "All the World's a Mall: Reflections on the Social and Economic

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________. "Reflections on the Consolidation of New York." New York Law School Law Review

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Lattimore, Richmond, trans. The Iliad of Homer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951.

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