

Word displays the Footnote and Endnote dialog box.

You can do that in Word 2002 or Word 2003 by following these steps: So, in the main body of the document format your endnotes so that they appear at the end of the section. Your document should now contain two sections-one for the body of the document and one for the index. So, the solution is to add a "next page" section break after the end of your document's body and just before the index.

You obviously don't want the endnotes at the end of your document if you want your index to appear after the endnotes. The reason for this confusion typically crops up because Word allows you to specify where your endnotes are placed-at the end of a section or the end of the document. If your document contains both endnotes and an index, you may wonder how you can place your index after your endnotes. For instance, Word allows you to easily add elements such as tables of contents, other special tables, footnotes, endnotes, and indexes. When you start adding different elements to your documents, you may wonder how to order those elements.
