The Shoutbox
No worries SB. I'm a girl who loves a classy bibliography! Good luck with your assignment!
damn - stop covering my advert with your useful chatter - "How to Stay on Top" - www.3btv.com - have i mentioned that yet?
21redd, thanks. Exactly what I needed.
i have the abswer to all your ailments - watch my humourous little movie on www.3btv.com - "How to Stay on Top" (alright - it is about war n deception n stuff. But that's what i call entertainment )
Silver, ibid means "the same place" in Latin - or something similar. You use it to cite consecutive refences to the same source in your bibliography or endnotes or whatever. So you would write something like:

The Silver Bullet Bible, MoFo Publishing 2002, p10

ibid, p25

ibid, p56

As long as you keep referencing the same source you use ibid and then just put the appropriate page number. Once you cite a new source you stop with the ibid - I mean you have to write the original source in full if you go back to it somewhere down the track.

I hope that makes sense.
Nothing's funny in a world with cancer.

Can no one answer my ibid question?
"I heard a joke today, oh boy" - wasn't funny though
When adding endnotes to a document [in this case, a history paper] when is the term "ibid" used? How is it written?

I need to know, 'cause I have two consecutive endnotes with the same reference...
Chingo Oip!

That's pure, freakin' gold.
Oh my God, that is just too priceless...
Wait wait ... Which one is the first name, Oip or Chingo? I mean, should he say, "Hi, my name is Oip Chingo"? Or should he say, "Hi, my name is Chingo Oip"? Or should he just shut up and stop with the evasive answers to obvious questions?
Screw you, Oip.