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Journalistic
Writing MCM310
VU
LECTURE
30
MECHANICS
ABBREVIATIONS
Use
standard abbreviations for
titles immediately before and
after proper names.
TITLES
BEFORE
TITLES
AFTER
PROPER
NAMES
PROPER
NAMES
Mr.
Rafael Zabala
William
Albert, Sr.
Ms.
Nancy Linehan
Thomas
Hines, Jr.
Mrs.
Edward Horn
Anita
Lor, Ph.D.
Dr.
Margaret Simmons
Robert
Simkowski, M.D.
The
Rev. John Stone
Margaret
Chin, LL.D.
Prof.
James Russo
Polly
Stein, D.D. S.
·
My
history prof. was an expert on
America's use of the atomic
bomb in Work War II.
Use
abbreviations only when you
are sure your readers will
understand them.
CIA
FBI
AFL-CIO
NAACP
NBA
UPI
NEA
CD-ROM
YMCA
CBS
USE
(for U.S.A)
ESL
Use
B.C., A.D., A.M., No., and $
only with specific dates,
times, numbers, and amounts.
40
B.C. (or B.C.E)
4:00
A.M. (or am)
No.
12 (or no. 12)
A.D.
44 (or C.E.)
6:00
P.M. (or pm)
$
150
·
We
set off for the late
early in the A.M.
(morning)
Be
sparing in your use of Latin
abbreviations.
cf.
(Latin confer,
"compare"
e.g.
(Latin exempli
gratia, for
example")
et
al. (Latin et alii, "and
others")
etc.
(Latin et
cetera, "and
so forth")
i.e.
(Latin id
est, "that
is")
N.B.
(Latin nota
bene, "(note
well")
Avoid
inappropriate abbreviations.
PERSONAL
NAME Charles
(Not chase)
UNITS
OF MEASUREMENT pound
(not lb.)
DAYS
OF THE WEEK Monday
(not Mon)
HOLIDAYS
Christmas
(not Xmas)
MONTHS
January,
February, March, (Not Jan.,
Feb., Mar)
COURSES
OF STUDY political
science (not poli
Sci)
DIVISIONS
OF WRITTEN WORKS Chapter,
page (not ch, p)
STATES
AND COUNTRIES Massachusetts
(not MA or Mass)
PARTS
OF A BUSINESS NAME Adams
Lighting Company (not Adams
Lighting Co.); Kim and
Brothers,
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Inc.
(not Kim and Bros.,
Inc)
·
Eliza
promised to buy me one lb.
of Govida chocolate for my
birthday, which was last
Fri.
NUMBERS
Spell
out numbers of one or two words or
those that begin a sentence.
Use figures for numbers
that
require
more than two words to spell
out.
·
Now,
some 8 (eight) years later, Muffin is
still with us.
·
I
counted one hundred seventy
six (176) CD's on the
shelf.
·
(One
hundred and fifty) 150
children in our program need
expensive dental treatment.
Generally
figures are acceptable
for
1.
Dates:
May
20, 2007
2.
Addresses: 20 The Mall Road,
Lahore 54000
3.
Parentages:
55
percent (or 55%)
4.
Fractions, Decimals: ½,
0.047
5.
Scores:
7 to 3,
21-18
6.
Statistics: average age 37,
weight 180
7.
Survey:
4 out
of 5
8.
Exact amount of money: Rs.
10,000
9.
Divisions
of books: volume
3, chapter 4, page
189
10.
Division of plays: act 3,
scene 3
11.
Time
of day: 4:00
P.M.
ITALICS
(UNDERLINING)
Underline
or italicize the titles of works
according to convention.
Titles
of books The
Great Gatsby, A Distant
Mirror
MAGAZINES
Time,
Scientific American
NEWSPAPERS
the
St. Louis
Post-Dispatch
PAMPHLETS
Common
Sense, Facts about
Marijuana
LONG
POEMS the
Waste Land, Paradise
Lost
PLAYS
King
Lear, A Raisin in the Sun
FILMS
Casablanca,
Independence Day
TELEVISION
PROGRAMS Friends,
60 Minutes
RADIO
PROGRAMS All
Things Considered
Underline
or italicize the names of spacecraft,
aircraft, ships, and trains.
·
The
success of the Soviets Sputnik
galvanized the U.S. space
program.
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Journalistic
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Underline
or italicize foreign words used in an
English sentence.
·
Although
Joe's method seemed to be successful, I
decided to establish my own
modus operandi.
Underline
or italicize words mentioned as words,
letter mentioned as letters, and numbers
mentioned
as
numbers.
·
Tim
assured us that the howling
probably came from his
bloodhound, Hill Billy, but
his probably stuck in
our
minds.
·
Sarah
called her farther by his
given name, Johnny, but she
was unable to pronounce J.
Avoid
excessive underlining or italics for
emphasis.
·
In
line skating is a sport that
has become an addiction.
SPELLING
Become
familiar with your
dictionary.
n.
noun
adj.
adjective
pl.
plural
adv.
adverb
Sing.
singular
pron
pronoun
v.
verb
prep
pronoun
tr.
transitive
verb
conj.
preposition
intr.
intransitive
verb
interj.
interjection
Discriminate
between words that sound alike
but have different
meanings.
Affect
(verb: "to exert an influence")
Effect
(verb: "to accomplish": noun:
"result")
Its
(possessive pronoun: "of or
belonging to it")
It's
(contraction for "it
is")
Loose
(adjective: "free, not
securely attached")
Lose
(verb: "to fail to keep, to be deprived
of")
Principal
(adjective: "most important";
noun: "head of a
school")
Principal
(noun: "a general or fundamental
truth")
Their
(possessive pronoun: "belonging to
them")
They're
(contraction for "they are")
There
(adverb: "that place or
position")
Who's
(contraction for "who")
Whose
(possessive form of
"who")
Your
(possessive form of
"you")
You're
(contraction of "you are")
Become
familiar with the major
spelling rules.
i
BEFORE e relieve,
believe, sieve,
frieze,
e
before i receive,
deceive, sleigh, freight,
eight
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Journalistic
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EXCEPTIONS
seize,
either, weird, height, foreign,
leisure
Generally,
drop a final silent e when
adding a suffix that begins
with a vowel. Keep the
final e if the
suffix
begins with a
consonant.
Desire,
desiring, remove,
removable
Achieve,
achievement, care,
careful
When
adding s or d to words ending in y,
ordinary change the y to ie
when the y is preceded by a
consonant
but not when it is preceded by a
vowel.
Comedy,
comedies, dries,
dried
Monkey,
monkeys, play, played
If
a final consonant is preceded by a
single vowel and the
consonant ends a one
syllable word or a
stressed
syllable,
double the consonant when adding a suffix
beginning with a vowel.
Bet,
betting, commit, committed, occur,
occurrence,
Add
s to form the plural of most
nouns, add es to singular
nouns ending in s, -sh,
-ch, and x
Table,
tables, paper, papers
Church,
churches, dish,
dishes
AMERICAN
BRITISH
Canceled,
traveled
Cancelled,
travelled,
Color,
humor
Colour,
humour
Judgment
Judgement
Check
Cheque
Realize,
apologize,
Realise,
apologise
Defense
Defence
Anemia,
anesthetic
Anaemia,
anaesthetic
Theater,
center
Theatre,
centre
Fetus
Foetus
Mold,
smolder
Mould,
smoulder
Civilization
Civillisation
Connection,
Inflection
Connexion,
inflexion
Licorice
Liquorice
THE
HYPHEN
Consult
the dictionary to determine
how to treat a compound
word.
·
The
prosecutor chose not to
cross examine any
witnesses.
·
Grandma
kept a small note book
(notebook) in her apron
pocket.
Use
a hyphen to connect two or more words
functioning together as an adjective
before a noun.
·
Mrs.
Douglas gave Toshiko a
seashell and some
newspaper-wrapped fish to take
home to her mother.
·
Pricilla
hood is not yet a well
known candidate.
·
After
our television campaign, Priscilla
Hood will be
well-known.
Hyphenate
the written form of fractions and of
compound numbers from twenty
one to ninety nine.
·
One
fourth of my income goes to
pay off the national
debt.
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If
a word must be divided at the
end of a line, divide it
correctly.
·
When
I returned from overseas, I didn't
recog-
-nize
one face on the magazine
covers.
CAPITAL
LETTERS
Capitalize
proper nouns and words
derived from them; do not capitalize
common nouns.
Proper
Nouns
Common
Nouns
God
god
Pakistan
a
country
Journalistic
Writing
a
language course
Virtual
University
a
good university
Environmental
Protection
a
federal agency
Dr.
A J Smith
a
researcher
Capitalize
titles of persons when used
as part of a proper name but usually not
when used alone.
·
Professor
Margaret Barnes; Dr. Harold
Stevens; John Scott Williams,
Jr.; Anne Tilton,
LL.D
·
District
Attorney Marshal was reprimanded for
badgering the witness.
·
The
district attorney was elected
for a two years
term.
Capitalize
the first, last, and all
major words in titles and
subtitles or works such as books,
articles
songs,
and online documents.
The
Impossible Theater: A Manifesto
The
F Plan Diet
"Fire
and Ice"
"I
Want to Hold Your
Hand"
Capitalize
the first word of a
sentence
·
When
lighting struck the house, the
chimney collapses.
Capitalize
the first word of a quoted
sentence but not a quoted
phrase.
·
In
Time
magazine
Robert Hughes writes, "There
are only about sixty Watteau
paintings on whose
authenticity
all experts agree."
·
Russell
Baker has written that in
our country sports are
"the opiate of the masses."
Do
not capitalize the first word after a
colon unless it begins in
independent clause, in which
case
capitalization
is optional.
·
Most
of the bar's patrons can be
divided into two groups: the
occasional after work socializes
and the
nothing
to go home to regulars.
·
This
we are forced to conclude: The
(or the) federal government is needed to
protect the rights of
minorities.
Capitalize
abbreviations for departments and
agencies of government, other
organizations, and
corporations,
capitalize the call letters of radio and
television stations.
·
EPA,
FBI, OPEC, IBM, WCRB,
KNBC-TV
Source:
Hacker, Dianna. A Writer's Reference
Boston: St. Martin's Press.
1992.
118
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