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I'm working on an article for publication in an academic journal that has a 6000-word limit for articles. Does anyone know whether this kind of limit normally includes end matter such as endnotes, bibliography, etc., or does it refer only to the body of the text? Thanks!

2006-07-02 17:37:41 · 3 answers · asked by ooooo 6 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

To the best of my knowledge, the end matter would be included in the 6000 words, unless the submission guidelines specifically state otherwise. Word limits are usually on the entire manuscript, which would include notes and bibliographies.

2006-07-02 18:12:31 · answer #1 · answered by starlightfading 4 · 1 0

When I submitted papers for university, the word limit did not include footnotes, endnotes or bibliographic entries. I would suppose it was the same at most academic journals (within reason).

2006-07-02 20:19:17 · answer #2 · answered by Jetgirly 6 · 0 0

No, even even as human beings yawn i do not. i opt to play a recreation with my acquaintances the position someone will yawn and we talked about who yawns first. I under no circumstances many times win until eventually i'm ill with a chilly because i'm getting so drained that is as if I stayed up an total week with a wink of sleep.

2016-10-14 01:56:28 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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