Type out the quote you are taking from your source that you would like to provide a footnote for.
Type a superscript number after the quotation. These superscript numbers will go in numerical order. For example, your first footnote will be number 1, and so on.
Type out the same superscript number in the footnote area of your paper.
Type the first and last name of the author right after the footnote number.
Type a comma and the title of the book underlined.
Type the city the book was published, a semi-colon, the publishing company, a comma and the year the book was published, all in parentheses.
Type the page number where you got your quote and a period to complete the citation.
Make sure your final citation looks like this: "1 Susan Smith, Cats are People Too (New York: Times, 2006) 125."
Number any footnotes used throughout your paper with only a superscript number. These superscript numbers will go in numerical order. For example, your first footnote will be number 1, and so on.
Create a new blank page at the end of your document and type "Footnotes" centered at the top of the page.
Use the numbers you have already created throughout your paper to number the footnotes page with all superscript numbers.
Place a space between the superscript number and the citation.
Type the last name of the author of the book, a comma, their first initial and a period.
Type the year the book was published in parentheses and a period.
Type the tile of the book in italics (only capitalizing the first word) and a period.
Type the location where the book was published, a semi-colon, the name of the publishing company and a period.
Make sure your final citation looks like this: "1 Smith, S. (2006). Cats are people too. New York: Times.