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Chicago Style (17th Edition): Short Form & Ibid.

This guide covers the Notes and Bibliography documentation system

Short Form

In Chicago style, the first time that an item is cited, provide a full citation for the item. For subsequent citations, use a shortened version of the footnote, which includes:

  • Author's last name (for edited works, use the editor's last name, but omit the "ed." after the name)
  • Shortened form of title (2-4 words; omit initial articles such as A, An, or The from the title)
  • Page number (when available)

Examples of full footnotes followed by short form footnotes:

1. John Bright, Jeremiah. The Anchor Bible (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1965), 60.

2. Danna Nolan Fewell and David M. Gunn, “Boaz, Pillar of Society: Measures of Worth in the Book of Ruth,” Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 45 (1989): 46.

3. Arthur A. Just, ed., “Overview, Luke 3:1-20,” in Luke, Ancient Christian Commentary (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2001), 57.

4. Bright, Jeremiah, 60.

5. Fewell and Gunn, “Boaz, Pillar of Society,” 46.

6. Just, “Overview, Luke 3:1-20,” 57.

Short Form and Ibid.

The 17th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style discourages the use of ibid., which previously was used to refer the same source cited in the previous footnote. 

Instead of using ibid., a shortened form of the citation may be used. The first time a shortened citation is used, all elements of short form should be included (author, brief title, page number). When citing the same source in multiple consecutive footnotes, to avoid repetition, the title may be omitted from the citation. The page number should be included in each footnote, even if it is the same as the previous footnote.

Examples of shortened citations:

1. Bright, Jeremiah, 60.

2. Bright, 60.

3. Fewell and Gunn, "Boaz, Pillar of Society," 46.

4. Fewell and Gunn, 45.