List the name of the first website you are citing, followed by a period. For example, write: "eHow."
Write the name of the specific article cited, followed by a period. Place quotations around the article title and period. For example, write: "How to Write a Chicago Style Bibliography for Online Sources."
Type "accessed" and the date on which you viewed the article. For example, write: "accessed September 30, 21010." If the website shows the last date on which the content was modified, use that date instead and change "accessed" to "last modified." Follow the date by a period and capitalize the first word of the phrase. For example: "Last modified September 30, 1020."
Insert the article's URL, followed by a period. For example, type: "http://www.ehow.com/how_6616315_write-bid-cleaning.html." Do not underline the URL.
Complete all other website source entries using the same format.
State the author's name. The Chicago Manual of Style allows for author names to be cited using only the last name, the first name followed by the last name, or the last name followed by a comma and then the first name. For example, you may write: "Lamott," "Anne Lamott" or "Lamott, Anne." If the book has more than one author, list them in the order in which they appear on the website.
List the title of the book. Use italic font for the title.
Write the name of the city in which the book was published, type a colon, write the name of the publisher, type a comma, write the year of publication and type a period. For example, write: "Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987."
Type the word "Accessed" and provide the date on which you read the material online, followed by a period. You need only do this if your professor or publisher requires you to do so.
Complete all other online book source entries using the same format.
State the name of the author who wrote the article. You may write the first name followed by the last name, or the last name followed by a comma and then the first name. If the article has more than one author, type the names in the order they appear on the website. Follow the author's name by a comma or a period.
Type the title of the article followed by a comma or a period. Enclose the article title in quotation marks.
Write the name of the journal or magazine and the volume number. Italicize only the name of the publication. Place the four-digit year in which the volume was published in parenthesis, after the volume number. Type a colon, and then write the electronic page numbers on which the article appears, if page numbers are available.
Print the word "Accessed" and provide the date on which you read the material online, followed by a period. You need only do this if your professor or publisher requires you to do so.
Insert the article's URL, followed by a period. Do not underline the URL.
Complete all other online journal and magazine source entries using the same format.
Alphabetize your bibliography by the first piece of information in each entry. This might be the author name, journal name or website address. If you are citing more than one article on the same website, alphabetize all entries from that website by article title.