"Office hours are subject to change without notice." That's all there is to it. If I double click it, Word scrolls down to the footnote text area. ![]() It's the number one, formatted as a superscript character. Let's scroll back up to see the footnote indicator in the text. Word places a numbered footnote at the insertion point, draws a line at the bottom of the page, places a matching number there, and positions the insertion point in the new footnote area, so you can enter the footnote text. Now click References, and then click Insert Footnote. In that section, click after the word Friday in the first paragraph to position the insertion point there. You can click Office Hours in the navigation pane to get there quickly. Let's start out by adding a footnote in the Office Hours section of the document. ![]() If it isn't showing for you, click View, and then turn on the Navigation Pane checkbox. If it's an endnote, word automatically puts it at the end of the document, or the document section. If it's a footnote, Word automatically puts it at the bottom of the same page that the reference appears, just where you'd expect a footnote to be. Just position the insertion point where you want the note reference to appear, click a button, set some options, and type in the text of your note. ![]() Its Footnote and Endnote feature makes it very easy to include notes in your long documents. I wish I'd had Microsoft Word back in those days. I can't tell you how many times I typed text too close to the bottom of a page for a footnote to fit, and had to retype the entire page again. All our term papers needed to be typed, and if that wasn't bad enough, most of them had to have footnotes. I know I'm showing off how old I am when I tell you that when I was in high school we didn't have word processors.
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