The Chicago Manual of Style is the official guide to Chicago format. You can also visit the Chicago Manual of Style Quick Guide for official guidance.
Chicago (CMOS) style is a citation format usually used in the humanities, history, the arts, etc., and is also known as Turabian style. It includes different versions for notes, shortened notes, and bibliographic entries.
Most changes are style changes that reflect the changing inclusive language and syntax. These changes are not noted specifically in this guide, but highlights include capitalization of prepositions more than 5 letters or more: ex: About, Below, Through, Above, etc.; pronouns are formalized and clarified; CMOS is pointing to Merriam-Webster Dictionary as the specific spelling and grammar authority.
For the Bibliography, please note changes affect bibliography, notes and shortened notes.
Binder, Amy J., and Jeffrey L. Kidder. The Channels of Student Activism: How the Left and Right Are Winning (and Losing) in Campus Politics Today. University of Chicago Press, 2022.
Yu, Charles. Interior Chinatown. Pantheon Books, 2020.
Liu Xinwu. The Wedding Party. Translated by Jeremy Tiang. Amazon Crossing, 2021.
Dittmar, Emily L., and Douglas W. Schemske. “Temporal Variation in Selection Influences Microgeographic Local Adaptation.” American Naturalist 202, no. 4 (2023): 471–85. https://doi.org/10.1086/725865.
Hebert, B. T. “The Island of Bolsö: A Study of Norwegian Life.” Sociological Review 17, no. 4 (1925): 307–13. EBSCOhost.
In the notes-bibliography system, each in-text reference is denoted by a number that corresponds to a footnote.
From Purdue OWL's "CMOS NB Sample Paper."
From Purdue OWL's "CMOS NB Sample Paper."
In the notes-bibliography system, the page at the end of your paper where you will list all of your citations should be titled Bibliography.
From Purdue OWL's "CMOS NB Sample Paper."
Special thanks to the following libraries for permitting the Merced College Library to adapt their Chicago 17th ed. guides.