
I'm preparing a dual-language book (documenting a Native American language). This pane can be adjusted simply by dragging the diving border up or down. You should then be able to print a copy of the document, without Hidden text, so that footnotes. Right-click the paragraph that you want to keep together. To keep the whole paragraph on the same page, follow these steps.


You may think that one way to get a printed copy without footnotes is to modify the styles used for footnotes (Footnote Text and Footnote Reference) so their font has the Hidden attribute set. Word automatically breaks paragraphs at the end of a page, so a paragraph that started on one page continues on to the next page. The Notes Pane will open at the bottom of the screen. Word normally includes the footnotes whenever you print. Ibidem is a Latin word that means in the same place. On the References tab, click the Cross-Reference button.

Select if you want to view footnotes or endnotes. Chicago style footnotes are placed at the bottom of the page: Silver, Nate. Place your insertion point where you want a reference inserted into the text. Given that this is the opposite problem to what worries most people, it's probably necessary to understand what I'm working on, to see why I need this. From the Footnotes group, click Show Notes. Is there something like a \newpage command that I could use in the middle of paragraph-style footnote ( para option in footmisc) that would force the remaining footnotes for page 2n onto page 2n+1? I need a way to make some footnotes appear on page 2n+1 when the text that they're "attached" to occurs on page 2n.
