No. It is an abbreviation of the latin word, ibidem.
IBID PROJECTS was created in 2002.
If Citation 1 and 3 are the same and you cannot use "ibid" to refer back to the previous citation, you can simply repeat the full citation information for Citation 3. Alternatively, you can use a shortened form of the citation with key elements to distinguish it from the previous one.
Ibid
There was more than one incident; and the reason for each is given when it happened. Some people complained (Numbers 11:1), some complained about the lack of meat (ibid. 11:4), Miriam said something not sufficiently respectful concerning Moses (ibid. ch.12), the spies complained about the seeming impossibility of the Israelites entering the Holy Land (ibid. ch.13), one person desecrated the Sabbath (ibid. ch.15), Korach complained about the leadership of Moses and Aaron (ibid, ch.16), some people complained after Korach was punished by God (ibid. ch.17), some people complained when there was no water (ibid. ch.20), some people complained about the manna and the long journey (ibid. ch.21), and some people went astray after the Moabite young ladies (ibid.ch.25).
Ibid. is the abbreviation of ibidem, a latin word meaning 'in the same place'. It's used in bibliographies to refer to the previous citing in the list.
The Latin abbreviation "ibid." means "in the same place." In footnotes, it refers to a source that was already cited previously in the text. So if you see "ibid ordinance" in a writing, it means whatever ordinance was mentioned previously. It is not a name of an ordinance, but a reference to one that was already mentioned in the text.
Ibid is not a legitimate site. However, there is a site called Ubid, where users can register and get an account to bid on various electronics and other items, and possibly get them at a discounted price.
God is the same work
ibid.
Ibid
Ibidem