John Doe3 says blah.
ibid.4 says blah.
ibid.5 says blah.
ibid.6 says blah.
In a note.7
A citation group.8
Another one.9
And another one in a note.10
Citation with a suffix and locator.11
Citation with suffix only.12
Now some modifiers.13
With some markup.14
Doe, John. “Article.” Journal of Generic Studies 6 (2006): 33–34.
———. First Book. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Doe, John, and Jenny Roe. “Why Water Is Wet.” In Third Book, edited by Sam Smith. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.
??? ↩
??? ↩
First Book (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005).↩
30.↩
30, with suffix.↩
“Article,” Journal of Generic Studies 6 (2006): 30; see also John Doe and Jenny Roe, “Why Water Is Wet,” in Third Book, ed. Sam Smith (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).↩
A citation without locators Doe and Roe, “Why Water Is Wet..↩
See Doe, First Book, 34–35; also Doe and Roe, “Why Water Is Wet,” chap. 3. ↩
See Doe, First Book, 34–35. ↩
Some citations see Doe, “Article,” chap. 3; Doe and Roe, “Why Water Is Wet”; Doe, First Book.↩
Doe, First Book, 33, 35–37, and nowhere else. ↩
Ibid. and nowhere else. ↩
Like a citation without author: , and now Doe with a locator “Article,” 44.↩
See Doe, First Book, 32. ↩