The following guidelines for formatting a Chicago-style paper and preparing its endnotes and bibliography are based on The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010). For pages from a sample paper, see 63f.
Formatting the paper
Font If your instructor does not require a specific font, choose one that is standard and easy to read (such as Times New Roman).
Title page Include the full title of your paper, your name, the course title, the instructor’s name, and the date. See a sample title page.
Pagination Using arabic numerals, number the pages in the upper right corner. Do not number the title page but count it in the manuscript numbering; that is, the first page of the text will be numbered 2. Depending on your instructor’s preference, you may also use a short title or your last name before the page numbers to help identify pages.
Margins, line spacing, and paragraph indents Leave margins of at least one inch at the top, bottom, and sides of the page. Double-space the body of the paper, including long quotations that have been set off from the text. (For line spacing in notes and the bibliography, see below.) Left-align the text.
Indent the first line of each paragraph one-half inch from the left margin.
Capitalization, italics, and quotation marks In titles of works, capitalize all words except articles (a, an, the), prepositions (at, from, between, and so on), coordinating conjunctions (and, but, or, nor, for, so, yet), and to and as—unless the word is first or last in the title or subtitle. Follow these guidelines in your paper even if the title is styled differently in the source.
Lowercase the first word following a colon even if the word begins a complete sentence. When the colon introduces a series of sentences or questions, capitalize the first word in all sentences in the series, including the first.
Italicize the titles of books and other long works. Use quotation marks around the titles of periodical articles, short stories, poems, and other short works.
Long quotations You can choose to set off a long quotation of five to ten typed lines by indenting the entire quotation one-half inch from the left margin. (Always set off quotations of ten or more lines.) Double-space the quotation; do not use quotation marks and do not add extra space above or below it. (See an example of a long quotation in the text of a paper; see also 63c.)
Visuals Chicago classifies visuals as tables and figures (graphs, drawings, photographs, maps, and charts). Keep visuals as simple as possible.
Label each table with an arabic numeral (Table 1, Table 2, and so on) and provide a clear title that identifies the table’s subject. The label and the title should appear on separate lines above the table, flush left. For a table that you have borrowed or adapted, give its source in a note like this one, below the table:
Source: Edna Bonacich and Richard P. Appelbaum, Behind the Label (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000), 145.
For each figure, place a label and a caption below the figure, flush left. The label and caption need not appear on separate lines. The word “Figure” may be abbreviated to “Fig.”
In the text of your paper, discuss the most significant features of each visual. Place visuals as close as possible to the sentences that relate to them unless your instructor prefers that visuals appear in an appendix.
URLs and DOIs When a URL or DOI (digital object identifier) must break across lines, do not insert a hyphen or break at a hyphen. Instead, break after a colon or a double slash or before any other mark of punctuation. If your word processing program automatically turns URLs into links (by underlining them and changing the color), turn off this feature.
Headings Chicago does not provide guidelines for the use of headings in student papers. If you would like to insert headings in a long essay or research paper, check first with your instructor. See the sample paper for typical placement and formatting of headings in a Chicago-style paper.
Preparing the endnotes
Begin the endnotes on a new page at the end of the paper. Center the title “Notes” about one inch from the top of the page, and number the pages consecutively with the rest of the paper. See an example.
Indenting and numbering Indent the first line of each note one-half inch from the left margin; do not indent additional lines in the note. Begin the note with the arabic numeral that corresponds to the number in the text. Put a period after the number.
Line spacing Single-space each note and double-space between notes (unless your instructor prefers double-spacing throughout).
Preparing the bibliography
Typically, the notes in Chicago-style papers are followed by a bibliography, an alphabetically arranged list of all the works cited or consulted. Center the title “Bibliography” about one inch from the top of the page. Number bibliography pages consecutively with the rest of the paper. See a sample bibliography.
Alphabetizing the list Alphabetize the bibliography by the last names of the authors (or editors); when a work has no author or editor, alphabetize it by the first word of the title other than A, An, or The.
If your list includes two or more works by the same author, arrange the entries alphabetically by title. Then use six hyphens instead of the author’s name in all entries after the first. (See item 6 in 63d.)
Indenting and line spacing Begin each entry at the left margin, and indent any additional lines one-half inch. Single-space each entry and double-space between entries (unless your instructor prefers double-spacing throughout).