Thank you!
Using
the Dictionary
Use the American Heritage Dictionaryonline for spelling,
denotation, connotation, and word division. If a word isn't
listed there, go to Webster's Third New International Dictionary. If
it isn't there either, don't use it.
Spelling
Use the first spelling listed except in official titles or
proper names. If a compound noun isn't listed as one word,
use two.
acknowledgment (not acknowledgement)
adviser (not advisor)
catalog (not catalogue)
course work (not coursework)
employee (not employe)
fieldwork (not field work)
flier ('a paper handout' or 'a person who flies,' not flyer)
fundraising (not fund-raising)
gray (not grey)
judgment (not judgement)
percent (not per cent)
theater (not theatre)
toward (not towards)
Department of Theater Arts
vender (not vendor)
but:
Robinson Theatre and University Theatre
Accents or hyphens are sometimes essential for spelling or pronouncing a word
correctly. See also Diacritical
Marks under Punctuation.
café, cliché
co-op (short for 'cooperative housing') vs.
coop (where a chicken lives)
résumé (noun) vs. resume (verb)
Although spell-checking programs can help you locate errors
in electronic manuscripts, you can't rely on them as a substitute
for your eyes and brain. Many spell checkers can't, for example,
choose preferred spellings, verify the spelling of proper
nouns, recognize technical terms, pick out contextual errors
such as dreadlocks for deadlocks, or
distinguish among homonyms such as their, there, and
they're.
Avoiding Disaster
You might need to search for potentially
embarrassing typographical errors:
asses for assess
curse for course
faulty for faculty
Lousie for Louise
Double check the spelling of proper nouns and of non-English
words and phrases. After you've run spell checks, read the
manuscript again for anything the program might have missed
or misconstrued.
Computer Terms
Use the following forms:
database (not data base or data-base)
e-mail (not E-mail or email)
Internet (not internet)
online (not on-line)
web (not Web)
website (not web site or web-site)
World Wide Web (not World-Wide Web)
Electronic Addresses
URL (pronounced Earl) stands for Uniform Resource Locator.
It's the address of a World Wide Web document. For example,
the URL for the Office of University Publications home page
is
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~uopubs/
It's critical that both URLs and Internet addresses be copied
exactly—including punctuation, capitalization, and spacing.
Place the address in brackets < > when it occurs in
running text. Try not to break the address if you can help
it. If you must break it, do it before a slash or a period.
Denotation
Although some words may seem to be interchangeable, try
to use the best term to express your intended meaning. The verbs assure,
ensure, and insure illustrate this kind of precise word
choice.
I assure you that it's true.
Arrive early to ensure yourself a seat.
You should insure valuable property.
Connotation
Connotation is as important as denotation. Besides
avoiding sexist and pejorative language, we now worry about political
correctness. This topic is much too complex to discuss here, but the American
Heritage Dictionary contains informative usage notes; see, for example,
black and color. The following list illustrates the
differences between surface and underlying meanings as well as shifting
intellectual and emotional attitudes about language. See also gender or
sex under Troublesome
Terms.
colorful people vs. colored people, minorities, people of color
Blacks, Afro-Americans, African Americans
Recent shifts in sensibility account for the following:
developing country (not Third World country)
international student (not foreign student)
second language (not foreign language)
Word Division
Word division can be as tricky as spelling. For example, you
can divide spell-ing but not spelled, rag-ged but
not bagged. Knowl-edge divides according
to pronunciation, but proj-ect (noun) and pro-ject (verb)
divide according to meaning. Consult the dictionary whenever
you're in doubt.
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