Click on the black arrow to open the chat in a new window.
If we're not online, please email us at urilibrarian@gmail.com. Please allow 1-2 business days for a response.
Below are examples of common Chicago style citation formats. For the most authoritative guide to Chicago style, please consult the style manual, which is linked below. Chicago also provides a Chicago-Style Citation Quick Guide.
Please note that this is what is often referred to as the "Humanities" style, or "Notes-Bibliography" format. Your professor will specify which format you should use for your citations.
A note about online sources: For any article or material you find online you will need the item's URL.
To create correct citations, ask yourself:
Article found in a database or online, with one author:
Lastname, First M. "Title of article." Title of Journal volume,
no. (issue date): pages, URL.
Example:
Klyberg, Albert T. "Collecting, preserving, and sharing
Rhode Island history: 175 years." Rhode Island History
55, no. 3 (August 1997): 88-99, http://search.ebscohost.com/
login.aspx?direct=true&db=ahl&AN=A000459246.01&site=
ehost-live.
Article from a print periodical with one author:
Lastname, First M. "Title of Article." Title of Journal volume, no.
(issue date): pages.
Example:
Klyberg, Albert T. "Collecting, preserving, and sharing
Rhode Island history: 175 years." Rhode Island History
55, no. 3 (August 1997): 88-99.
Article (online) with two authors:
Lastname, First M., and Firstname M. Surname. "Title of article."
Title of Journal volume, no. (issue date): pages,
URL.
Example:
Saunders, Laura S., and John A. Saunders. "Early public transportation
to the islands of Rhode Island." Log of Mystic Seaport 42, no. 3 (1990):
70-76, http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ahl&AN=
A000331184.01&site=ehost-live.
Article with three or more authors (list all authors in the order listed on
the publication):
Lastname, Frank M., Frances M. Surname, John R. Smith, and Jane M. Doe.
"Title of article." Title of Journal volume, no. (issue date): pages,
URL as applicable.
Book with one author:
Lastname, First M. Title of Book: Subtitle of Book. Publication Location:
Publisher, Year.
Example:
Lemons, J. Stanley. The First Baptist Church in America.
Providence, R.I.: Charitable Baptist Society, 1988.
Books with multiple authors:
The format follows the author format as listed under articles.
An edited book:
Editor, First M., ed. Title of Book: Subtitle of Book. Publication Location:
Publisher, Year.
Example:
Livingston, Carolyn, and Dawn Elizabeth Smith, eds. Rhode Island's
musical heritage: An exploration. Sterling Heights, MI: Harmonie
Park Press, 2008.
Web site with one author:
Lastname, First M. "Title of page." Publisher. URL.
Example:
Gelles, Jason. "URI scientist helps the Navy tame Quonset."
Brown University. http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/
WWII_Women/ScientistHelps.html.
Web site with a corporate or organizational author:
Organization Name. "Title of page." Publisher. URL.
Example:
UNH Dimond Library, Documents Department & Data Center.
Historic USGS maps of New England & New York: Providence, MA-RI
Quadrangle. University of New Hampshire. http://docs.unh.edu/
nhtopos/Providence.htm.
In this format, images are only listed in the Notes, not in the Bibliography.
Image from an online source with a creator listed:
Creator, First M., Title of Image, Date Created, URL.
Example:
Swanbrow, D., A Happiness Ranking of 97 Nations, 23 Jul. 2008,
http://www.ur.umich.edu/0708/Jul14_08/23.php.
Image from an online source with no creator listed:
Title of Image, Date Created, URL.
Image from a print source with a creator listed:
Creator, First M., Title of Image, Date Created, in [Continue the remainder
of the citation with citation information of the book or article as appropriate.]
Citation and research tips and tricks from the Chicago Manual of Style Shop Talk Blog.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.