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:Manual of Style - Knowledge

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9388: 16010:. An exception may be made when there is a widely accepted historical English name appropriate to the given context. In cases where such a historical name is used, it should be followed by the modern name in round brackets (parentheses) on the first occurrence of the name in applicable sections of the article. This resembles linking; it should not be done to the detriment of style. On the other hand, it is probably better to provide such a variant too often than too rarely. If more than one historical name is applicable for a given context, the other names should be added after the modern English name, that is: "historical name (modern name, other historical names)". 9376: 9400: 9433: 3568:. As with plant cultivars, this applies whether or not the included noun is a proper name, in contrast to how vernacular names of species are written. However, unlike cultivars, breeds are never put in single quotation marks, and their names are never part of a scientific name. A species term appended at the end for disambiguation ("cat", "hound", "horse", "swine", etc.) should not be capitalized, unless it is a part of the breed name itself and is consistently presented that way in the breed standards (rare cases include 18019:: "Consensus among a limited group of editors, at one place and time, cannot override community consensus on a wider scale. For instance, unless they can convince the broader community that such action is right, participants in a wikiproject cannot decide that a Knowledge policy or guideline does not apply to articles within its scope." And: "Knowledge has a higher standard of participation and consensus for changes to policies and guidelines than to other types of pages." Subordinate pages include 19674: 18360:"Quoted text" for typographic conformity and many other purposes includes titles of works, names of organizations, and other strings that are, in essence, quoted. Example: things like "Mexican-American War" are routinely corrected to "Mexican–American War" on Knowledge, including in titles of cited sources. This has no effect on searching for the works we have cited, since all major search engines disregard punctuation marks. 16672: 37: 9418: 8993:) is sometimes an alternative to a full stop (period), enabling related material to be kept in the same sentence; it marks a more decisive division in a sentence than a comma. If the semicolon separates clauses, normally each clause must be independent (meaning that it could stand on its own as a sentence). In many cases, only a comma or only a semicolon will be correct in a given sentence. 8899:) introduces something that demonstrates, explains, or modifies what has come before, or is a list of items that has just been introduced. The items in such a list may be separated by commas, or if they are more complex and perhaps themselves contain commas, the items should be separated by semicolons or arranged in a bulleted list. 18257:
from the last few years. For broader English-language usage matters, about forty years is typical. While style guides with fewer than five years in print have not been in publication long enough to have had as much real-world impact as those from around 2000–2015 (on which MoS is primarily based), the corpora used for
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Invisible comments are useful for alerting other editors to issues such as common mistakes that regularly occur in the article, a section title's being the target of an incoming link, or pointing to a discussion that established a consensus relating to the article. They should not be used to instruct
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are the nouns used to refer to specific places and geographic features. These names often give rise to conflict, because the same places are called different things by different peoples speaking different languages. Many place names have a historical context that should be preserved, but common sense
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of such a person, use their current name by default, and give another name associated with that context in a parenthetical or footnote, only if they were notable under that name. In other articles, do not go into detail about such a person's name or gender except when directly relevant to the context.
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Use an en dash between the names of nations or nationalities when referring to an association between them. For people and things identifying with multiple nationalities, use a hyphen when using the combination adjectivally and a space when they are used as nouns, with the first used attributively to
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Former names under which a living person was notable should be introduced with "born" or "formerly" in the lead sentence of their main biographical article. Name and gender matters should be explained at first appearance in that article, without overemphasis. In articles on works or other activities
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Where space is limited (such as tables, infoboxes, parenthetical notes, and mathematical formulas) unit symbols are preferred. In prose, unit names should be given in full if used only a few times but symbols may be used when a unit (especially one with a long name) is used repeatedly after spelling
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Dashes are often used to mark divisions within a sentence: in pairs (parenthetical dashes, instead of parentheses or pairs of commas) or singly (perhaps instead of a colon). They may also indicate an abrupt stop or interruption in reporting quoted speech. In all such cases, either unspaced em dashes
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In most cases, a colon works best with a complete grammatical sentence before it. When what follows the colon is also a complete sentence, start it with a capital letter, but otherwise do not capitalize after a colon except where doing so is needed for another reason, such as for a proper name. When
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Quotations from non-English language sources should appear with a translation into English, preferably a modern one. Quotations that are translations should be explicitly distinguished from those that are not. Indicate the original source of a translation (if it is available, and not first published
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Capitalization in non-English language titles varies, even over time within the same language; generally, retain the style of the original for modern works, and follow the usage in current English-language reliable sources for historical works. When written in the Latin alphabet, many of these items
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Ships may be referred to using either neuter forms ("it", "its") or feminine forms ("she", "her", "hers"). Either usage is acceptable, but each article should be internally consistent and employ one or the other exclusively. As with all optional styles, articles should not be changed from one style
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style in all articles, regardless of the variety of English in which they are written. Include terminal punctuation within the quotation marks only if it was present in the original material, and otherwise place it after the closing quotation mark. For the most part, this means treating periods and
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In MoS's own wording, "recent", "current", "modern", and "contemporary" in reference to sources and usage should usually be interpreted as referring to reliable material published within the last forty years or so. In the consideration of name changes of persons and organizations, focus on sources
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Photographs and other graphics should have captions, unless they are unambiguous depictions of the subject of the article or when they are "self-captioning" images (such as reproductions of album or book covers). In a biography article no caption is necessary for a portrait of the subject pictured
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Where a word or phrase that includes terminal punctuation ends a sentence, do not add a second terminal punctuation mark. If a quoted phrase or title ends in a question mark or exclamation mark, it may confuse readers as to the nature of the article sentence containing it, and so is usually better
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Collapsing content using those classes does not work in the mobile version, where such content is simply always shown. However, applying, or using a template that applies, any of the following CSS classes will cause the affected content to be inaccessible to mobile users, and this list may not be
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When there is a discrepancy between the term most commonly used by reliable sources for a person or group and the term that person or group uses for themselves, use the term that is most commonly used by recent reliable sources. If it is unclear which is most used, use the term that the person or
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readers that something is interesting, ironic, surprising, unexpected, amusing, coincidental, etc. Simply present sourced facts neutrally and let readers draw their own conclusions. Such constructions can usually just be deleted, leaving behind proper sentences with a more academic and less pushy
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and, in most cases, it is not a requirement that the original formatting be preserved. Formatting and other purely typographical elements of quoted text should be adapted to English Knowledge's conventions without comment, provided that doing so will not change or obscure meaning or intent of the
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is inappropriate for some forms of writing, but it is widely used in encyclopedia articles, because the passive voice avoids inappropriate first- and second-person constructions as well as tone problems. The most common uses of encyclopedic passive are to keep the focus on the subject instead of
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also use pre-collapsed sections for infrequently accessed details. If information in a list, infobox, or other non-navigational content seems extraneous or trivial enough to inspire pre-collapsing it, consider raising a discussion on the article (or template) talk page about whether it should be
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However, where one or more sentences are wholly inside brackets, place their punctuation inside the brackets. There should be no space next to the inner side of a bracket. An opening bracket should usually be preceded by a space. This may not be the case if it is preceded by an opening quotation
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This is an English-language encyclopedia, so established English names are preferred if they exist, and spellings in non-English alphabets should always be transcribed into the Roman alphabet. In general, other articles should refer to places by the names which are used in the articles on those
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Articles on topics with strong ties to a particular English-speaking country should generally use the more common date format for that country (month-first for the US, except in military usage; day-first for most others; articles related to Canada may use either consistently). Otherwise, do not
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Image filenames are not part of the encyclopedic content; they are tools. They are most useful if they can be readily typed, so they usually use hyphens instead of dashes. Similarly, article titles with dashes should also have a corresponding redirect from a copy of the title with hyphens: for
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over an article, although where existing local consensus is against making an edit they may usefully draw the editor's attention to that. Avoid adding too many invisible comments because they can clutter the wiki source for other editors. Check that your invisible comment does not change the
1011:. If a discussion does not result in consensus for the change at the article, continue to use the already-established style there. If discussion fails to reach a consensus regarding which of two or more competing styles to use at all, then default to the style that was used in the first post- 15915:(linking within Knowledge) can result from trying too hard to avoid putting explanations in parenthetical statements, like the one that appeared earlier in this sentence. Do not introduce specialized words simply to teach them to the reader when more widely understood alternatives will do. 7394:
If the quotation is a single word or a sentence fragment, place the terminal punctuation outside the closing quotation mark. When quoting a full sentence, the end of which coincides with the end of the sentence containing it, place terminal punctuation inside the closing quotation mark.
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Sometimes the MoS provides more than one acceptable style or gives no specific guidance. When either of two styles is acceptable it is generally considered inappropriate for a Knowledge editor to change from one style to another unless there is some substantial reason for the change.
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If the person is living and was not notable yet when a former name was in use, that name should not be included in any Knowledge page, even in quotations, as a privacy matter. Exception: Do not expunge or replace names in source citations (whether as authors or mentioned in work
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Use italics for the titles of works (such as books, films, television series, named exhibitions, computer games, music albums, and artworks). The titles of articles, chapters, songs, episodes, storylines, research papers and other short works instead take double quotation marks.
1992:(and of table columns and rows). However, table headings can incorporate citations and may begin with, or be, numbers. Unlike page headings, table headers do not automatically generate link anchors. Aside from sentence case in glossaries, the heading advice also applies to the 8439:
In geographical references that include multiple levels of subordinate divisions (e.g., city, state/province, country), a comma separates each element and follows the last element unless followed by terminal punctuation or a closing parenthesis. The last element is treated as
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tags pointing to articles with a fuller treatment of the prerequisite material. This approach is practical only when the prerequisite concepts are central to the exposition of the article's main topic and when such prerequisites are not too numerous. Short articles, such as
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Text written in non-Latin scripts such as Greek, Cyrillic, and Chinese should not be italicized or put in bold, as the difference in script is already sufficient to visually distinguish the text. Generally, any non-Latin text should include an appropriate romanization.
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may be used with tables if they simply repeat information covered in the main text (or are purely supplementary, e.g., several past years of statistics in collapsed tables for comparison with a table of uncollapsed current stats). Auto-collapsing is often a feature of
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Non-English vernacular names, when relevant to include, are handled like any other non-English terms: italicized as such, and capitalized only if the rules of the native language require it. Non-English names that have become English-assimilated are treated as English
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with that title to ensure that these still work. Similarly, when linking to a section, leave an invisible comment at the heading of the target section, naming the linking articles, so that if the heading is later altered these can be fixed. For (a combined) example:
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websites that have not been used as sources and do not appear in the earlier appendices, using the heading "External links", which may be made a subsection of "Further reading" (or such links can be integrated directly into the "Further reading" list instead);
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may be used to illustrate a point, establish context, or attribute a point of view or idea. While quotations are an indispensable part of Knowledge, try not to overuse them. Using too many quotes is incompatible with an encyclopedic writing style and may be
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Italics are indicated for non-English phrases and isolated non-English words that are not commonly used in everyday English. However, proper names (such as place names) in other languages are not usually italicized, nor are terms in non-Latin scripts. The
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Be conservative when linking within quotations; link only to targets that correspond to the meaning clearly intended by the quote's author. Where possible, link from text outside of the quotation instead – either before it or soon after. (If quoting
5532:. If there are nested quotations, follow the rules for correct punctuation in that language. If there are multiple styles for a language, the one used by the Knowledge for that language is preferred unless the punctuation itself is under discussion. 17712: 15637:, and other characters that are not commonly used in contemporary English. Knowledge normally retains these special characters, except where there is a well-established English spelling that replaces them with English standard letters. Examples: 9108:
A sentence may contain several semicolons, especially when the clauses are parallel in construction and meaning; multiple unrelated semicolons are often signs that the sentence should be divided into shorter sentences or otherwise refashioned.
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When more than one variant spelling exists within a national variety of English, the most commonly used current variant should usually be preferred, except where the less common spelling has a specific usage in a specialized context, e.g.,
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software does not require that wikilinks begin with an upper-case character. Capitalize the first letter only where this is naturally called for, or when specifically referring to the linked article by its name (see also related rule for
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This is the principal way in which logical quotation differs from typical British news punctuation practice, in which many publishers permit such a change to the quoted material, which is antithetical to the accuracy purpose of logical
14271:"See" and the like can be used to internally cross-reference other Knowledge material. Do not italicize words like "see". Such a cross reference should be parenthetical, so the article text stands alone if the parenthetical is removed. 2161:(such as books, films, and music) should be given as they appear in sources. However, there are certain situations where this principle is not followed in order to maintain a level of typographic conformity across the encyclopedia: see 17272:
in prose, it may be counterproductive in a table (where an unattractive break may be acceptable to conserve precious horizontal space) and unnecessary in a short parameter value in an infobox (where a break would never occur anyway).
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There are some rare additional exceptions to capitalization of eponyms, in which a term has been strongly conventionalized in lower-case, i.e., is preferred that way in a majority of major English-language dictionaries. For example,
17331:), and never by entering them directly into the edit window from the keyboard – they are visually indistinguishable from regular spaces, and later editors will be unable to see what they are. Inside wikilinks, a construction such as 6166:
template which both italicizes as appropriate and provides language metadata); and to use actual and (if at all possible) common English words in the translation. Unless you are certain of your competency to translate something, see
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permits live preview. The "Mobile view" page-bottom feature shows the article only as it currently exists; if using that, and considering a change that could have mobile accessibility implications, please save the change first in a
17455:, which does not support collapsing and will either completely uncollapse or completely hide the content within the template. The usability of the mobile site is easy to test with the "Mobile view" link at the bottom of each page. 10753: 8903:
We visited several tourist attractions: the Leaning Tower of Pisa, which I thought could fall at any moment; the Bridge of Sighs; the supposed birthplace of Petrarch, or at least the first known house in which he lived; and so many
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However, national varieties should not be changed, as these may involve changes in vocabulary. For example, a quotation from a British source should retain British spelling, even in an article that otherwise uses American spelling.
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in American or Canadian English articles in which it is already established, unless there is a good reason to change it. Because use of periods for abbreviations and acronyms should be consistent within any given article, use
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There should be a space after a closing bracket, except where a punctuation mark follows (though a spaced dash would still be spaced after a closing bracket) and in unusual cases similar to those listed for opening brackets.
14467:– may refer either to a single entity or to the members that compose it. In British English, such words are sometimes treated as singular, but more often treated as plural, according to context (but singular is not actually 16018:. If a different name is appropriate in a given historical or other context, then that may be used instead, although it is normal to follow the first occurrence of such a name with the standard modern name in parentheses. 18825:
Wikipedians are encouraged to familiarize themselves with modern editions of other guides to style and usage, which may cover details not included here. Those that have most influenced the Knowledge Manual of Style are:
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When quoting a complete sentence, it is usually recommended to keep the first word capitalized. However, if the quoted passage has been integrated into the surrounding sentence (for example, with an introduction such as
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in non-English words is neither encouraged nor discouraged. Use generally depends on whether they appear in reliable English-language sources, though with some additional constraints imposed by site guidelines. Provide
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Editors may use either convention so long as each article is internally consistent. Serial commas are more helpful when article text is complex, such as a list with multi-word items (especially if one contains its own
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Editors use "invisible" comments – not shown in the rendered page seen by readers of the article, but visible in the source editing mode when an editor opens the article for editing – to communicate with one another.
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However, quotation marks are needed inside wikilinks when the quotation mark is part of the link, or where the linked display text includes quotation marks indicating slang, nicknames, common names, or similar usage.
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Terms such as "current", "now", and "recent" should be avoided. What is current today may not be tomorrow; situations change over time. Instead, use date- and time-specific text. To help keep information updated use
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Always use present tense for verbs that describe genres, types, and classes, even if the subject of the description (e.g. program, library, device) no longer exists, is discontinued, or is unsupported/unmaintained.
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If the quoted sentence is followed by a clause identifying the speaker, use a comma outside the quotation mark instead of a full stop inside it, but retain any other terminal punctuation, such as a question mark.
5343:), but do not omit text where doing so would remove important context or alter the meaning of the text. Vulgarities and obscenities should be shown exactly as they appear in the quoted source; Wikipedians should 9307:
in the middle, if it is an adverb meaning "although" that could have been placed at the beginning but does not start a new clause in mid-sentence. In this use, the word may be enclosed between commas. Example:
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Books or other works created by the subject of the article, under a section heading "Works", "Publications", "Discography", "Filmography", etc. as appropriate (avoid "Bibliography", confusable with reference
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In country-specific articles, use the currency of the country. On first occurrence, consider including conversion to US dollars, euros, or pounds sterling, at a rate appropriate to the context. For example,
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of the site. However, checking the desktop site on a mobile device may be a worthwhile for some broader accessibility matters, especially on tablets, which do not always use the mobile version of Knowledge.
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Avoid referring to images as being to the left, the right, above or below, because image placement varies with platform, and is meaningless to people using screen readers; instead, use captions to identify
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Editors should write articles using straightforward, succinct, easily understood language and structure articles with consistent, reader-friendly layouts and formatting (which are detailed in this guide).
16092:. To be clear, you may sometimes need to mention the current name of the area (for example "in what is now France"), especially if no English name exists for that area in the relevant historical period. 14471:). In North American English, these words are almost invariably treated as singular; the major exception is that when a sports team is referred to by its short name, plural verbs are commonly used, e.g. 4841:). Quotation marks may also be used for shorter material to avoid confusion, such as when italics are already heavily used in the page for another purpose (e.g., for many non-English words and phrases). 18202:
but on the same line may cause the section-editing link to fail to appear at all; in other browsers, it may appear, but using it will cause the section heading to not automatically be added to the edit
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This below-quotation attribution style is intended for famous quotations and is unusual in articles because it may strike an inappropriate tone. A quotation with no cited source should be flagged with
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for categories containing dashes. When an en dash is being used as a separator in an article title or section heading, editors may choose whether to capitalize what follows, taking into consideration
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are helpful when an apostrophe (or single quote) appears at the beginning or end of text in italics or bold, because italics and bold are themselves indicated by sequences of single quotes. Example:
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of a notable breeder/fancier organization. Various other groupings of domesticated animals are not standardized breeds: ancient historical varieties, breed groups, feral populations, landraces, and
13514:. Care should be taken not to confuse the dot operator (in the "Math and logic" section of the edit toolbox) with an interpunct (in the "Insert" section of the edit toolbox) or a bullet. The letter 3198: 2868: 19009: 145: 7362:
commas in the same way as question marks: keep them inside the quotation marks if they apply only to the quoted material and outside if they apply to the whole sentence. Examples are given below.
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Avoid confusing constructions by rewriting. Paraphrase, elide, or use square brackets to replace portions of quotations as needed to avoid confusion, former names, and mismatching gendered words.
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Direct quotation should not be used to preserve the formatting preferred by an external publisher (especially when the material would otherwise be unchanged), as this tends to have the effect of
14490:), but exceptionally in British English, typically when used to refer to a sports team named after a town or country or when discussing actions of a government, plural is used. For example, in 3455:) and in sentence case at the start of sentences and in other places where the first letter of the first word is capitalized. They are additionally capitalized where they contain proper names: 1412:
An introductory image, when an infobox is not used, or an additional image is desired for the lead section (for unusually long leads, a second image can be placed midway through the lead text)
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should prevail. There can be few places that have not been parts of more than one culture or have had only one name. As proper nouns, all such place names (but not terms for types of places)
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Do not leave blank lines between items in a bulleted or numbered list unless there is a reason to do so, since this causes the Wiki software to interpret each item as beginning a new list.
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The English-language titles of compositions (books and other print works, songs and other audio works, films and other visual media works, paintings and other artworks, etc.) are given in
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Even for readers with unimpaired color vision, excessive background shading of table entries impedes readability and recognition of Wikilinks. Background color should be used only as a
16191: 12834:, are used only where space is extremely limited. Such abbreviations should use three letters only, and should not be followed by a period (full point) except at the end of a sentence. 18448: 17676: 15875: 15042: 10457: 7582:
Internal links (wikilinks) accompanied by quotation marks should usually have the quotes outside the link. This applies to titles of works in quotation marks (songs, episodes, etc.)
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is separate from the article content. In some older skins, a navigable table of contents appears automatically just after the lead if an article has at least four section headings.
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which should not end with a period. However, if any complete sentence occurs in a caption, then every sentence and every sentence fragment in that caption should end with a period.
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Quotation should be used, with attribution, to present emotive opinions that cannot be expressed in Knowledge's own voice, but never to present cultural norms as simply opinional:
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Square brackets are used to indicate editorial replacements and insertions within quotations, though this should never alter the intended meaning. They serve three main purposes:
17495: 3106:, a political party). Use lower case for doctrinal topics or canonical religious ideas (as opposed to specific events), even if they are capitalized by some religious adherents ( 1510: 9242:
is a conjunction meaning "in whatever manner", or "regardless of how", it may be preceded by a comma but not by a semicolon, and should not be followed by punctuation. Example:
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language codes, correctly identifying the language and automatically italicizing for you. Please use these templates rather than just manually italicizing non-English material.
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In a direct quotation, always retain the source's units. Any conversion should follow in square brackets (or, an obscure use of units can be explained in the article text or a
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Do not follow quoted words or fragments with commas inside the quotation marks, except where a longer quotation has been broken up and the comma is part of the full quotation.
8672: 4136:) unless confusion could result. This is also common practice in scientific writing. Regardless of punctuation, words that are abbreviated to more than one letter are spaced ( 17504: 17444: 17391: 16318:
Captions for technical charts and diagrams may need to be substantially longer than usual; they should fully describe all elements of the image and indicate its significance.
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Do not use programming language notation outside computer program text. In most programming languages, subtraction, multiplication, and exponentiation are represented by the
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Curly quotation marks and apostrophes are deprecated on the English Knowledge because straight quotation marks and apostrophes are easier to type reliably on most platforms.
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In general, in numbers with five or more digits to the left of the decimal point, use commas to group those digits. Numbers with four digits are at the editor's discretion:
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For the "colon trick" (for linking to a category, image, or interwiki link without adding the page to the category, displaying the image, or adding the interwiki link), see
4016:. An initialism is formed from some or all of the initial letters of words in a phrase. Below, references to abbreviations should be taken to include acronyms, and the term 532: 522: 16752: 16391: 5423:
Concise opinions that are not overly emotive can often be reported with attribution instead of direct quotation. Use of quotation marks around simple descriptive terms can
18097: 10795:. The components may be nouns, adjectives, verbs, or any other independent part of speech. Often, if the components are reversed there would be little change of meaning. 8923:
a colon is being used as a separator in an article title, section heading, or list item, editors may choose whether to capitalize what follows, taking into consideration
3308: 20119: 19712: 8157:(Place terminal punctuation after an ellipsis only if it is textually important, as is often the case with exclamation marks and question marks but rarely with periods.) 2369: 18565:
This has the benefit of helping screen readers pronounce the name correctly. Such a proper name may be italicized when contrasting it with a conventional English form:
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It is sometimes desirable to force a text segment to appear entirely on a single line‍—‌that is, to prevent a line break (line wrap) from occurring anywhere within it.
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The text of captions should not be specially formatted, except in ways that would apply if it occurred in the main text (e.g., italics for the Latin name of a species).
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used by the visually impaired. Any important textual information in an image should be provided somewhere as text, generally either in the image's caption or alt text.
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Values and units used as compound modifiers are hyphenated only where the unit is given as a whole word; when using the unit symbol, separate it from the number with a
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If a non-quoted but otherwise identical construction would work grammatically without a comma, using a comma before a quotation embedded within a sentence is optional:
5188:, and so most of the content should be in the editor's own words. Consider paraphrasing quotations into plain and concise text when appropriate (while being aware that 14608:
and products or works that have been discontinued. Generally, use past tense only for past events, and for subjects that are dead or no longer meaningfully exist. Use
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includes conventional uses of quotation marks such as for titles of songs, chapters, episodes, and so on. Quotation marks are also used in other contexts, such as in
18290: 18056: 16249:. These tasks are generally difficult or impossible with text presented in an image: images are slower to download, and generally cannot be searched or processed by 15020: 11781: 8741:– which may list either two people (O'Connor, who is the friend, and Marley) or three people (the first being the friend, the second O'Connor, and the third Marley). 5961:
It is conventional to precede a block quotation with an introductory sentence (or sentence fragment) and append the source citation to that line. Alternatively, the
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Use italics within quotations to reproduce emphasis that exists in the source material or to indicate the use of non-English words. The emphasis is better done with
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tags directly, is that when edits are made to the section in the future, the anchor will not be included in page history entries as part of the section name. When
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Some topics are necessarily technical: however, editors should seek to write articles accessible to the greatest possible number of readers. Minimize the use of
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In the first case, the clause that starts with "however" cannot be swapped with the first clause; in the second case this can be done without change of meaning:
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An article on a topic that has strong ties to a particular English-speaking nation should use the (formal, not colloquial) English of that nation. For example:
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reduces usability, as it may be impossible for people with custom style sheets (e.g. for accessibility reasons) to override it, and may clash with a different
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Use dashes sparingly. More than two in a single sentence makes the structure unclear; it takes time for the reader to see which dashes form a pair, if any.
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It is normally unnecessary to explicitly note changes in capitalization. However, for more precision, the altered letter may be put inside square brackets:
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The en dash in a range is always unspaced, except when either or both elements of the range include at least one space, hyphen, or en dash; in such cases,
4132:) but in common British and Australian usage, no period/point is used if the abbreviation (contraction) ends in the last letter of the unabbreviated form ( 3348:. (Supergenus and subgenus, when applicable, are treated the same way.) Italicize but do not capitalize taxonomic ranks at the level of species and below: 2634: 723: 647: 592: 547: 16413:
Use the same grammatical form for all elements in a list, and do not mix sentences and sentence fragments as elements, for example when the elements are:
19457: 19395: 19385: 15904:, so that it can be addressed by other editors. For topics that require a more technical approach, the creation of a separate introductory article (like 3624: 684: 577: 572: 16682:
simple. This makes wikitext easier to understand and edit, and the results seen by the reader more predictable. Use HTML and CSS markup sparingly. See:
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in month–day–year format require a comma after the day, as well as after the year, unless followed by other punctuation. The last element is treated as
5424: 5401: 5003:) alone are sufficient and the correct ways to denote quotations. Italics should only be used if the quoted material would otherwise call for italics. ( 3909: 2717: 19370: 19036: 18603: 16245:, rather than in an image. True text can be easily searched, selected, copied, and manipulated by readers; its presentation can also be adjusted using 15046: 14296: 12325:
In normal text, never put a space before a comma, semicolon, colon, period/full stop, question mark, or exclamation mark (even in quoted material; see
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Relevant books, articles, or other publications that have not been used as sources; use the section heading "Further reading"; be highly selective, as
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page for redirects to the old section title. If there are only a small number of links to the old section title, it may be better to just update them.
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To avoid awkward linebreaks, code spaced slashes (and fraction slashes) with a non-breaking space on the left and a normal space on the right, as in:
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It is clearer to use a colon to introduce a quotation if it forms a complete sentence, and this should always be done for multi-sentence quotations:
2338: 587: 537: 517: 17474:). Other methods of hiding content should not be used, as they may render content inaccessible to many users, such as those browsing Knowledge with 15940: 15743: 12366:
reworded to be mid-sentence. Where such a word or phrase occurs mid-sentence, new terminal punctuation (usually a period) must be added at the end.
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Avoid words and phrases that give the impression of straining for formality, that are unnecessarily regional, or that are not widely accepted. See
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Format a long quote (more than about forty words or a few hundred characters, or consisting of more than one paragraph, regardless of length) as a
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In direct quotations, retain dialectal and archaic spellings, including capitalization (but not archaic glyphs and ligatures, as detailed below in
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depends on the punctuation preceding that word. A common error is to use the wrong punctuation, thereby changing the meaning to one not intended.
8938:), no sentence should contain multiple colons, no space should precede a colon, and a space (but never a hyphen or dash) should follow the colon. 6099: 3813: 2681: 2334: 19705: 19267: 18048: 17396:
Elements that can selectively display or hide content can interfere with the ability of readers to access said content. These mechanisms include
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section at the end, pointing to further information outside Knowledge as distinct from citing sources. The standard format is a primary heading,
16015: 16005: 15996: 15978: 15606:), that form should be used. Otherwise, the romanization of names should adhere to a particular widely used system for the language in question ( 15400: 13028: 8198:
Square brackets may be placed around an ellipsis that indicates omitted text to distinguish it from an ellipsis that is part of the quoted text:
4896: 4626: 4587:, and abbreviations). Another frequent permissible but not required use is in short bibliographic references to works by multiple authors, e.g.: 3312: 2195: 1725: 1120: 440: 190: 18697: 18518:
In unusual cases where a lack of spacing could create confusion, such as when a citation is immediately preceded by other superscripted text, a
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Use specific terminology. For example, it is often more appropriate for people or things from Ethiopia (a country in Africa) to be described as
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Three dots are occasionally used to represent a pause in or suspense of speech, in which case the punctuation is retained in its original form:
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of "pulling" material already in the article to reuse it in attention-grabbing decorative quotations. This unencyclopedic approach is a form of
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to indicate omissions from quoted text. Legitimate omissions include extraneous, irrelevant, or parenthetical words, and unintelligible speech (
5193: 4849:(in which something is usually expressed on behalf of a quoted source). Quotation is done with quotation marks, never italics, nor both at once 2862: 19004: 17967: 13233:), unless there is a particular reason to do so; do not use potentially ambiguous currency symbols, unless the meaning is clear in the context. 3387: 140: 18545: 16544:: Ensure the destination is the intended one; many dictionary words lead to disambiguation pages and not to complete or well-chosen articles. 16176: 14735: 4643: 4637: 4571:. Elsewhere, ampersands may be used with consistency and discretion where space is extremely limited (e.g., tables and infoboxes). Quotations 4128:). A consistent style should be maintained within an article. North American usage is typically to end all abbreviations with a period/point ( 3521:. When the common name coincides with a scientific taxon, do not capitalize or italicize, except where addressing the organism taxonomically: 1489: 900:(though provisions related to accessibility apply across the entire project, not just to articles). This primary page is supported by further 19472: 19175: 16969: 16934: 16293:
alone, but one might be used to give the year, the subject's age, or other circumstances of the portrait along with the name of the subject.
15408: 1603: 1101: 652: 610: 505: 327: 18077: 8735:– which may list either four or more people (the friends and the two people named) or two people (O'Connor and Marley, who are the friends). 4408: 1500: 18880: 17924: 17706: 6479:
For further treatment of apostrophe usage (possessive, elision, formation of certain plurals, non-English language issues) see the article
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should be updated or removed. There are many templates that allow HTML markup to be used without putting it in articles directly, such as
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Hyphenation involves many subtleties that cannot be covered here; the rules and examples presented above illustrate the broad principles.
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revision that introduced an identifiable variety. The established variety in a given article can be documented by placing the appropriate
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Generally, use the full name of a currency, and link it on its first appearance if English-speakers are likely to be unfamiliar with it (
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Most people are right-handed. (Some people are left-handed, but that does not make right-handed people "better" than left-handed people.)
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has been established in an article, maintain it in the absence of consensus to the contrary. With few exceptions (e.g., when a topic has
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follow the text to which the footnote applies, with no intervening space. Apart from the exceptions listed below, references are placed
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Use a commonly understood word or phrase in preference to one that has a different meaning because of national differences (rather than
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Notes and references, with a section heading "Notes" or "References" (usually the latter), or a separate section for each in this order
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markup) to indent text in articles, even though it is common on talk pages. It causes accessibility problems and outputs invalid HTML.
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adjacent punctuation, not before. Adjacent reference tags should have no space between them, nor should there be any between tags and
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An exception is issue numbers of comic books, which unlike for other periodicals are conventionally given in general text in the form
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Ideally, an en dash should be preceded by a non-breaking space; this prevents the dash from appearing at the beginning of a line. The
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Don't let other punctuation distract you from the need for a comma, especially when the comma collides with a bracket or parenthesis:
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The garbled transmission ended with "We are stranded near San L...o", interpreted as a reference to either San Leandro or San Lorenzo.
6107: 4561:. But retain an ampersand when it is a legitimate part of the style of a proper noun, the title of a work, or a trademark, such as in 3370:; no exception is made for proper names forming part of scientific names. Higher taxa (order, family, etc.) are capitalized in Latin ( 2345: 1699: 20525: 19217: 19149: 19087: 19082: 19062: 19016: 18942: 17512: 16763: 15005: 14010: 9122:
Oranges are an acidic fruit; bananas are classified as alkaline; pears are close to neutral; these distinctions are rarely discussed.
8206:. In this example, the first ellipsis is part of the quoted text and the second ellipsis (in square brackets) indicates omitted text. 7191: 4701: 2705: 2685: 2615: 2597: 1378:
for article-wide issues that have been flagged (otherwise used at the top of a specific section, after any sectional hatnote such as
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Style guidelines for still images are generally also applicable to equivalent questions regarding the use of audio and video media.
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In some contexts, no terminal punctuation is necessary. In such cases, the sentence often does not start with a capital letter. See
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When quoting a quotation that itself contains a quotation, alternate between using double and single quotes for each quotation. See
4575:, especially for consistency where different editions are quoted, as modern editions of old texts routinely replace ampersands with 3473:. This applies to species and subspecies, as in the previous examples, as well as to general names for groups or types of organism: 2889:
and their followers (in noun or adjective form) start with a capital letter. Generally, "the" is not capitalized before such names (
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Names in languages with no particular present-day or historical ties to the place in question (English excepted, of course) should
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dashes, not after. If a footnote applies only to material within parentheses, the tags belong just before the closing parenthesis.
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To be or not to be: that is the question: / Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer / The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
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Do not enclose block quotations in quotation marks (and especially avoid large, decorative quotation marks; those provided by the
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LaVesque's report stated: "The equipment was selected for its low price. This is the primary reason for criticism of the program."
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at the start of an institution's name, regardless of the institution's preferred style. There are rare exceptions, when a leading
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are acceptable (though not required) as section headings. They are also used frequently as part of longer article titles such as
17634: 17621: 17508: 14836:, for example – if this can be done with clarity and precision. This does not apply to direct quotations or the titles of works ( 12184: 11599: 11374: 11240: 11208: 3985: 3889: 2693: 2574: 2039: 1007:
by discussing this at the article's talk page or – if it raises an issue of more general application or with the MoS itself – at
463: 458: 252: 212: 197: 130: 17860: 15486: 7733: 7221: 6392:, also make a redirect from the ASCII form to aid searches. Forms without apostrophe-like characters are sometimes preferred by 5638:
Expand an abbreviation (not already used in the content before the quotation) as a square-bracketed change, or explain it using
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When no English variety has been established and discussion does not resolve the issue, use the variety found in the first post-
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These technical restrictions are necessary to avoid technical complications and are not subject to override by local consensus.
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and similar templates, among other things. Any MoS guidance about the start of a sentence applies to items using sentence case.
17918: 16257: 15506:– do not require italics. A rule of thumb is to not italicize words that appear in major general-purpose English dictionaries. 14928: 14583: 14364: 11150:
Instead of a hyphen, use an en dash when applying a prefix or suffix to a compound that itself includes a space, dash or hyphen
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Or, if the ellipsis immediately follows a quotation mark, use no space before the ellipsis, and a non-breaking space after it:
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for "Bachelor of Veterinary Medicine". In most situations, Knowledge uses no such punctuation inside acronyms and initialisms:
2925:). Do not capitalize "the" when using it in this way. Some derived adjectives are capitalized by convention, and some are not ( 2150:
The conventions of a particular variety of English should be followed consistently within a given article. Exceptions include:
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that can be toggled between collapsed and uncollapsed states using a button. These mechanisms should not be used to conceal "
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In general, wikitext formatting is considered easier to use than HTML and wikitext is preferred if there are equivalents; see
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At the start of an article, provide notable equivalent names from other languages, including transcriptions where necessary:
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Where English-speaking countries use different units for the same measurement, provide a conversion in parentheses. Examples:
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Write out "million" and "billion" on the first use. After that, unspaced "M" can be used for millions and "bn" for billions:
12927:, with no apostrophe. Use the two-digit form ('80s) only with an established social or cultural meaning. Avoid forms such as 9175: 8909: 8528: 8441: 7737: 5825:
The reader must be able to determine the source of any quotation, at the very least via a footnote. The source must be named
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Lubbers & Scheepers (2002); Van Hiel & Mervielde (2002); Swyngedouw & Giles (2007); Van Hiel (2012).</ref: -->
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Names of planets, moons, asteroids, comets, stars, constellations, and galaxies are proper names, and therefore capitalized (
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that are not sections go at the very top of the article, before the content of the lead section, and in the following order:
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For the major parts of the Manual of Style, see the sidebar at top right of this page (visible only in desktop view, not in
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It is often preferable to place images of people so they "look" toward the text. Do not achieve this by reversing the image.
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template which also provide additional information about a non-English word or phrase, such as a link to the language name;
14699:(Emphasis added to distinguish the different tense usages; Dún Aonghasa is a structure that was later damaged by an event.) 12168:
number designations (typically one being a year-relative and the other an absolute value); they should be given in the form
3807: 19600: 19515: 19252: 19247: 19201: 18963: 18028: 17996: 17992: 17984: 17942: 17835: 9668:). In rare cases, a hyphen can improve clarity if a rewritten alternative is awkward, but rewording is usually preferable: 9135:
Oranges are an acidic fruit, bananas are alkaline, and pears are close to neutral; these distinctions are rarely discussed.
9024:
Above, "Though he had been here before" cannot stand on its own as a sentence, and therefore is not an independent clause.
6752: 5891:, add an editorial note, or , as appropriate, to avoid ambiguity as to whether the link was made by the original author.) 3324: 3320: 831: 709: 425: 420: 366: 45: 17709:– an essay providing a summary of off-site style guides' influences on MoS and their uses as sources in Knowledge articles 16566:, followed by a bulleted list of links. Identify the link and briefly indicate its relevance to the article. For example: 16212: 15038: 14059:
To maintain an objective and impersonal encyclopedic voice, an article should never refer to its editors or readers using
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First – at a marshy site leveled with landfill – came the workshop; administrative and other buildings were erected later.
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If a sentence includes subsidiary material enclosed in square or round brackets, it must still carry terminal punctuation
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In a letter to his son, Albert Einstein wrote: "Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance you must keep moving."
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is sometimes better than the equivalent Unicode character, which may be difficult to identify in edit mode; for example,
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delimited by two equal signs, or at the top of the lead section. Do not place images immediately above section headings.
9168:
Sales offices are located in Boston, Massachusetts; San Francisco, California; Singapore; and Millbank, London, England.
9155:
Sales offices are located in Boston, Massachusetts, San Francisco, California, Singapore, and Millbank, London, England.
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or by a closing quotation mark (single or double), use a non-breaking space before the ellipsis, and no space after it:
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Semicolons are used in addition to commas to separate items in a listing, when commas alone would result in confusion.
5310:(producing  ) to show that the error was not made by Knowledge. When applied to a title parameter within a <ref: --> 4563: 2874: 2043: 2004:, terms will automatically have link anchors, but will not otherwise. Citations for description-list content go in the 1997: 978: 915:
Where more than one style or format is acceptable under the MoS, one should be used consistently within an article and
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In non-scientific articles with strong ties to the United Kingdom, although the main unit is generally a metric unit (
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Journals and other publications that are issued seasonally (e.g., "Summer 2005") should be dated as such in citations
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This section is about ranges of numbers, dates, or times. For other ranges, such as ranges of physical locations, see
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Avoid adjacent sets of brackets. Either put the parenthetical phrases in one set separated by semicolons, or rewrite:
4057:
an early local area network (LAN) developed by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC)... DEC's later LAN products were...
4023: 1035: 20663: 20345: 19722: 19520: 19031: 18591: 17743: 17654: 17633:(IPA). In most situations, for ease of understanding by the majority of readers and across variants of the language, 16454: 14784: 13518:
should not be used to indicate multiplication, but it is used (unspaced) as the substitute for "by" in terms such as
12958:, including the handling of dates expressed in different calendars, and times corresponding to different time zones. 11353:. Consider the relationship that exists between two components when deciding what punctuation to place between them. 6761:
that translate or define unfamiliar terms take single quotes; simple glosses require no comma before the definition (
5838: 1466:, several kinds of material (mostly optional) may appear after the main body of the article, in the following order: 1371: 713: 167: 16939:
Do not use quotation templates to indent non-quotations. Various templates are available for indentation, including
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When the concepts underlying the jargon used in an article are too complex to explain concisely in a parenthetical,
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is a Canadian science fiction television series that ran for five seasons between October 6, 1997, and May 20, 2002.
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In non-scientific articles with strong ties to the United States, the main unit is generally a U.S. customary unit (
12522: 9631:). Where there would otherwise be a loss of clarity, however, a hyphen may be used in the predicative form as well ( 7301: 7062: 2970:). Do not capitalize "the" in such cases or when referring to major religious figures or characters from mythology ( 1351:
No-output templates that indicate the article's established date format and English-language variety, if any (e.g.,
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generally should not be used but may apply in some contexts (e.g., quoted material, place names, titles of works).
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Units unfamiliar to general readers should be presented as a name–symbol pair on first use, linking the unit name (
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The program was criticized primarily because "the equipment was selected for its low price", according to LaVesque.
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If such mechanisms are used, care must be taken to ensure the content remains accessible for all users, including
17292:), which is sometimes used to correct too-close placement of adjacent characters. To prevent this, consider using 16150:
Each image should be inside the level2 section to which it relates, within the section defined by the most recent
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A slash or some other alternative may occasionally be better to express a ratio, especially in technical contexts
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The book summarizes works of some major philosophers in chronological order: Descartes, Locke, Hume – but not his
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and some video games, initial capitals are sometimes used to indicate that the beings form a culture or race in a
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orthography, largely indistinguishable from British English in encyclopedic writing (excepting Canada, which uses
2194:(and derivative terms) should be used regardless of the variety of English otherwise employed in the article. See 20350: 20287: 19796: 19791: 19283: 19196: 19165: 19113: 18599: 18587: 18443:
A change from a general preference for two digits, to a general preference for four digits, on the right side of
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The PDP-10 is a mainframe computer family manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation from 1966 into the 1980s.
14268:). This interactive personality is inconsistent with an encyclopedia's passive presentation of objective matter. 10054: 4265:), never use periods. When the United States is mentioned with one or more other countries in the same sentence, 1550: 867: 449: 361: 317: 257: 18653: 16472:: Excessive use of hyperlinks can be distracting and may slow the reader down. Redundant links (like the one in 15791: 12342: 7119:
A comma is required when it would be present in the same construction if none of the material were a quotation:
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Templates cannot be used in article titles; if necessary, use the corresponding Unicode character directly. Per
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Italicize only the elements of the sentence affected by the emphasis. Do not italicize surrounding punctuation.
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For retention of an article's established national variety of English (and potential reasons to change it), see
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It is desirable to prevent line breaks where breaking across lines might be confusing or awkward. For example:
14496: 14492: 11215: 10304:). Nonetheless, to aid searching and linking, provide a redirect with hyphens replacing the en dash(es), as in 10123:
or narrow spaces (such as captions, narrow table columns, or text adjacent to a very wide image), for example:
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or the change reduces ambiguity), there is no valid reason for changing from one acceptable option to another.
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Double quotation marks are preferred to single because they are immediately distinguishable from apostrophes:
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Use gendered words only if they reflect the person's latest self-identification as reported in recent sources.
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between the dash and the name. Most of Knowledge's quotation templates provide this formatting automatically.
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What this grim, ungainly, ghastly, gaunt, and ominous bird of yore Meant in croaking "Nevermore."
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that supports the material. This is especially important in articles that are about or contain material about
3765:). Do not capitalize descriptive names for regions that have not attained the status of proper names, such as 1965:
occur. Note: if electing to insert the span directly, do not abbreviate it by using a self-closing tag, as in
1015:
version of the article in which one of the applicable styles appeared. (This fall-back position does not give
20645: 20636: 19960: 18935: 18595: 18212:
To find out how many inlinks there are to the old section title and what articles have them, you can execute
17749: 17731: 17421: 16419:– each one is formatted with sentence case (its first letter is capitalized) and a final period (full point); 15696: 15463:. As Knowledge does not apply italics to names of people, places, or organizations, the alternative template 15334:
to any person whose gender might be questioned, and any living transgender or non-binary person. In summary:
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Unit symbols are preceded by figures, not by spelled-out numbers. Values and unit symbols are separated by a
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symbols for improved readability and accessibility. Be mindful of presentations that may require ASCII, like
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First – at a marshy site leveled with landfill – came the workshop – then administrative and other buildings.
7864:) is used to indicate that material is removed from a direct quotation, it should not normally be bracketed. 7567: 7548: 7518: 7252: 6154:
When editors themselves translate text into English, care must always be taken to include the original text,
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template have been disabled in mainspace). Block quotations using a colored background are also discouraged.
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Avoid abbreviations when they might confuse the reader, interrupt the flow, or appear informal. For example:
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Use universally accepted terms rather than those less widely distributed, especially in titles. For example,
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the criteria of being natural, sufficiently precise, concise, and consistent with those of related articles.
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Sources use dashes in varying ways. For consistency and clarity, Knowledge adopts the following principles.
9209:
is an adverb meaning "nevertheless", it should be preceded by a semicolon and followed by a comma. Example:
7144:
Caitlyn Jenner expressed concerns about children, "who are coming to terms with being true to who they are".
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is used by the organization or by independent sources; use the original name and its official abbreviation,
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Religions, deities, philosophies, doctrines, and their adherents
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and test the mobile version of that. The mobile website can also be accessed by changing a page's URL from
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at all, as it interferes with editors' ability to find and edit it. Moreover, content in an article should
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Captions should be succinct; more information can be included on its description page, or in the main text.
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Likewise, "See: (reference)" or "Consider ..." are milder second-person baits, common in academic writing (
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For complete guidance on the handling of titles of works, see (until the material is better consolidated):
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Caitlyn Jenner expressed concerns about children "who are coming to terms with being true to who they are".
7124:
In Margaret Mead's view, "we must recognize the whole gamut of human potentialities" to enrich our culture.
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If the original, untranslated text is available, provide a reference for it or include it, as appropriate.
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For complete guidance on the handling of titles of works, see (until the material is better consolidated):
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provide information about such differences. The English Knowledge prefers no national variety over others.
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It is important to note that the colloquial dialect of Portuñol is similar to but different from Mirandese
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If a numerical format is required (e.g., for conciseness in lists and tables), use the YYYY-MM-DD format:
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Modern writing uses fewer commas; there are usually ways to simplify a sentence so that fewer are needed.
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should be capitalized when they form part of a proper name, but not when they are used as a generic term (
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Before changing a heading, consider whether you might be breaking existing links to it. If there are many
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to that particular style during consensus discussion, nor give the editor who imposed that earliest style
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in non-English languages should generally not be italicized, unless another reason applies; such as with
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may be expressed either in numerals or in words. Other numbers are given in numerals or in forms such as
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Mozart was, along with the Haydns, both Joseph and Michael, and also Beethoven, one of Schubert's heroes.
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the quotation. Other terminal punctuation, such as a question mark or exclamation mark, may be retained.
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attributed, and the wording of the quoted text must be faithfully reproduced. This is referred to as the
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also usually go at the top of this section when it is present (otherwise in the last section on the page)
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because the actual Unicode character ( ) is almost invisible, the meaning of the numerical HTML entity (
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Here, the relationship is thought of as parallel, symmetric, equal, oppositional, or at least involving
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Normalize archaic glyphs and ligatures in English that are unnecessary to the meaning. Examples include
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from alternative capitalization and spelling forms of article titles, and from alternative names, e.g.,
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External links should not normally be used in the body of an article. Instead, articles can include an
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Knowledge:What Knowledge is not § Knowledge is not a manual, guidebook, textbook, or scientific journal
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In general, use decimals rather than fractions for measurements, but fractions are sometimes used with
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He continued to pursue Smith ("...{{nbsp}}to the ends of the earth", he had sworn) until his own death.
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However, if the entire sentence is within brackets, the closing punctuation falls within the brackets.
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Darwin wrote in his introduction that "the maxim 'de minimis lex non curat' does not apply to science".
3563: 3187:), except in idiomatic uses disconnected from the original context and usually lower-cased in sources ( 2619: 1521: 1344: 1321: 53: 19758: 16976: 15479:
automatically italicize text written using the Latin alphabet, so specifying italics is unnecessary.
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However, there are cases in which either omitting or including the serial comma results in ambiguity:
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For an international encyclopedia, using vocabulary common to all varieties of English is preferable.
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horizontally between two images that face each other, and between an image and an infobox or similar.
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A place should generally be referred to consistently by the same name as in the title of its article
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Sentences should place punctuation after mathematical formulae as if they were normal body text. See
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Colons are often used for strictly numeric ratios, to avoid confusion with subtraction and division:
4826:). When a whole sentence is mentioned, double quotation marks may be used instead, with consistency ( 4421: 4310: 1983: 1244:, for cases where an article about a published work has a title that coincides with the work's title. 18658: 18331:. "Standardized breed" lacks a perfectly clear meaning, but does encompass any breed subject to the 13304:
Scientific articles may also use specialist units appropriate for the branch of science in question.
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An article should not be edited or renamed simply to switch from one variety of English to another.
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For a non-English name, phrase, or word, adopt the spelling most commonly used in English-language
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It is usually better to rewrite the material to integrate these links contextually rather than use
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Any quotation marks that are part of the title should be in bold just like the rest of the title.
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For a brief guide to how some punctuation marks are used in Knowledge for special purposes, e.g.,
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Abbreviations are shortened forms of words or phrases. In strict analysis, they are distinct from
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Knowledge:If MOS doesn't need a rule on something, then it needs to not have a rule on that thing
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Whether a non-breaking space is appropriate depends on context: whereas it is appropriate to use
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Times of day are normally expressed in figures rather than words. Context determines whether the
12589:: Paris is not the capital city of England – the capital of which is London – but that of France. 11869: 11356: 11320: 10389:
Dashes can clarify a sentence's structure when commas, parentheses, or both are also being used.
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character, which is entered by the hyphen or minus key on all standard keyboards. Do not use the
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The message was unintelligible except for the fragments "help soon" and "how much longer before".
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template provides parameters for attribution and citation which will appear below the quotation.
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Reputable English-language encyclopedias and dictionaries in the aggregate are often helpful in
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Private Use Area and invisible formatting characters
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Jumbo Comics was an adventure anthology comic book published by Fiction House from 1938 to 1953.
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If a person cannot be specified, or when implying "anyone" as a subject, the impersonal pronoun
13506:), which are input by clicking on them in the edit toolbox under the edit window or by entering 13437: 11668:), or rarely in quoted prose, where careful marking of a paragraph break is textually important; 11243:. However, the principle is not extended when compounding other words in category names, e.g., 10510:§ In compounds when the connection might otherwise be expressed with to, versus, and, or between 5611:). For titles of books, articles, poems, and so forth, use italics or quotation marks following 2614:. Other points concerning capitalization are summarized below. Full information can be found at 2308:, as appropriate), except in technical contexts where such substitution would be inappropriate ( 20260: 19980: 19970: 19737: 19550: 17793: 17384: 16777: 16296: 16246: 15761:. When non-English text should not be italicized, it can still be properly tagged by using the 15565: 14697:
presumably oval or D-shaped, but parts of the cliff and fort have since collapsed into the sea.
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can be used to style formulas to distinguish them from surrounding text. For single variables,
13245:. Wording such as "approx." is not appropriate for simple rounding-off of the converted amount. 12526: 10997: 10131:. Use sparingly to avoid making wikitext difficult to read and edit. For more information, see 9619: 9080: 8254: 7769:
Only the royal characters in the play ( Hamlet and his family) habitually speak in blank verse.
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If a sentence contains a bracketed phrase, place the sentence punctuation outside the brackets
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text. These are alterations which make no difference when the text is read aloud, for example:
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When an abbreviation will be used in an article, first introduce it using the full expression:
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She wrote that "Cleanthes' differs from the others', but neither opinion may represent Hume's"
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She wrote that 'Cleanthes' differs from the others', but neither opinion may represent Hume's'
17591:<!-- If you change this section title, also change the links to it on the pages ... --: --> 17578:
To leave an invisible comment, enclose the text you intend to be read only by editors between
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Names of seasons may be used when there is a logical connection to the event being described (
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He said, "That book asserts, 'Confucius said "Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it.
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Do not use capitals in the full version merely because capitals are used in the abbreviation:
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other editors not to perform certain edits, which could be perceived as expressing a form of
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If you believe an alternative style would be more appropriate for a particular article, seek
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New content added to this page should directly address a persistently recurring style issue.
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References to space programs, past, present and future, should use gender-neutral phrasing:
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Do not use an en dash for hyphenated personal names, even when they are used as adjectives:
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Hyphenation rules in other languages may be different. Thus, in French a place name such as
8257:(as can brackets or dashes, though with greater interruption of the sentence). For example: 4959: 2508: 1826: 1681: 929: 20564: 20430: 20069: 19945: 19877: 19845: 19806: 19630: 19595: 19590: 19499: 18888: 18820: 18348: 18284: 16493:) followed by the appropriate heading will lead to a relevant part of a page. For example, 15634: 14506: 13967: 13073: 12404:
Slovak, having grown tired of What Is This?, returned to the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1985.
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to indicate regular defined yearly periods that do not coincide with calendar years (e.g.,
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is necessary to, or alters, the sense of the adjective rather than simply intensifying it (
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He traveled through North Carolina before staying in Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the night.
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The heading must be on its own line, with one blank line just before it; a blank line just
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in British English) with its own title uses quotation marks for that title, as a sub-work.
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Names of towns and countries usually take singular verbs (even when grammatically plural:
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Slovak returned to the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1985 after growing tired of What Is This?.
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Do not use a capital letter after a hyphen except for a proper name following the hyphen:
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He traveled through North Carolina before staying in Chattanooga, Tennessee for the night.
8088:) if material is omitted in the course of a quotation, unless square brackets are used to 7562: 7543: 7513: 7183: 6961: 6699: 6138: 6131: 3612: 2785: 1988:
The above guidance about sentence case, redundancy, images, and questions also applies to
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The final character should not be punctuation unless it is an inseparable part of a name (
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Generally (has application beyond the topic guideline in which it is currently located):
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Knowledge:Verifiability § Self-published or questionable sources as sources on themselves
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Slovak returned to the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1985 after growing tired of What Is This?
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or spaced en dashes can be used, with consistency maintained throughout a given article:
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of commas for this, unless another punctuation mark takes the place of the second comma:
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citation templates do this automatically, and untemplated references should do the same.
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children, while separately observing that children, in general, "are coming to terms...")
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Uncertain, incomplete, or approximate dates
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joint project of the United States Department of Defense and the Australian Defence Force
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Hawaii-related articles § Orthography, spelling and formatting
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in an article with other country abbreviations, and especially avoid constructions like
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Terms that differ between varieties of English, or that have divergent meanings, may be
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the numbering has some independent meaning, for example in a listing of musical tracks.
16328: 16269: 16224: 16158: 16112: 15953: 15891: 15868: 15867:"Knowledge:Jargon" redirects here. For an explanation of jargon used on Knowledge, see 15850: 15587: 15515: 15383: 15368: 15362: 15248: 15172: 14944: 14897: 14801: 14717: 14530: 14329: 14133: 14021: 13992: 13891: 13767: 13744: 13443: 13422: 12456: 12449: 12441: 12348: 12301: 12227: 11975: 11799: 11519: 11417: 11262: 11163: 11155: 10989: 10782: 10774: 10470: 10406: 10174: 10084: 9840: 9799: 9791: 9343: 9181: 8979: 8955: 8947: 8867: 8633: 8563: 8515: 8507: 8422: 8216: 8089: 8069: 8062: 8040: 7701: 7663: 7529: 7307: 7068: 6975: 6967: 6835: 6705: 6547: 6493: 6216: 6180: 6123: 6082: 6067: 5900: 5870: 5862: 5468: 5379: 5248: 5149: 5052: 5044: 4980: 4965: 4738: 4601: 4517: 4306: 4302: 4182: 4029: 3915: 3657:) or when used as the name of a specific body in a scientific or astronomical context ( 3601: 3584: 3557: 3332: 3290: 3206: 3035: 2583: 2552: 2548: 2520: 2407: 2393: 2351: 2271: 2208: 2120: 2021: 1890: 1818: 1757: 1742: 1673: 1640: 1632: 1556: 1254: 1221: 1041: 935: 788: 83: 75: 18554:
Assistant manager Peggy Plimpton-Chan reported the break-in to police the next morning
18468:", except in a game where a lower score is better. Otherwise, use a construction like 17545:"WP:COMMENT" redirects here. For the expression of personal opinions in articles, see 17392:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Users with limited CSS or JavaScript support
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causes disputes, as other editors may disagree aesthetically with the choice of style.
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is less than, is less than or equal to, is greater than, is greater than or equal to:
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Generally, use a non-breaking space before an ellipsis, and a regular space after it:
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External links to article titles should have the title in quotes inside the link. The
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within Knowledge), and the original language (if that is not clear from the context).
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tag set or similar text creating links, the syntax of the template may be adjusted to
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that are distinguishable by readers with the most common form of colorblindness, and
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For non-English characters that resemble single quotation marks and apostrophes, see
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is a mobile game developed by Vietnamese video game artist and programmer Dong Nguyen
14566: 14382:) in which a word is now listed in major English dictionaries, and normally takes an 14337: 14000: 13752: 12639: 12280: 11724: 10292: 9806: 9639:). Awkward attributive hyphenation can sometimes be avoided with a simple rewording: 9553: 9189: 8818:
The author thanked her childhood friend, Sinéad O'Connor, and her mentor, Bob Marley.
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L'auteur aurait dû demander : « à quoi sert-il d'écrire ceci ? » mais ne l'a pas fait
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Knowledge article titles and section headings use sentence case, not title case; see
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Internal links to related English Knowledge articles, with section heading "See also"
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Best practice: wiki markup and CSS classes
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Note that this was naturally subject to controversy in more conservative newspapers.
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Knowledge:Citing sources § Seasonal publication dates and differing calendar systems
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cannot prohibit or require the use of diacritics within a given class of articles.
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formatting, for example by introducing unwanted white space in the rendered page.
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Knowledge:What Knowledge is not § Knowledge is not a publisher of original thought
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for phrases and words that are not current in English. This is best done with the
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Statements likely to become outdated
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Exclamation and question marks have almost no application in encyclopedic writing.
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Another "planet" was detected{{snd}}but it was later found to be a moon of Saturn.
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Spelling § British English with "-ize" (Oxford spelling)
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Jones wrote: "These stories amaze me. The facts suffer so frightfully{{nbsp}}...".
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When quoting text from non-English languages, the outer punctuation should follow
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reasons; users of text-to-speech systems usually cannot hear a difference between
3864:. Do not mimic the style of local newspapers which refer to their municipality as 3550:
should generally retain the capitalization used in the breed standards. Examples:
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For articles about chemistry-related topics, the international standard spellings
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It is a generally accepted standard that editors should attempt to follow, though
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Tense can be used to distinguish between current and former status of a subject:
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for articles about periodicals no longer produced, with common-sense exceptions.
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For the possessive of singular nouns, including proper names and words ending in
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Editors may choose whether to capitalize what follows, taking into consideration
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Use an en dash for the names of two or more entities in an attributive compound.
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Regardless of how they tried, it was obvious they could not convert these people.
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It was obvious they could not convert these people, regardless of how they tried.
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The meaning of a sentence containing a trailing clause that starts with the word
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Use separate sentences, bullet lists, or some other structural change to clarify.
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if they have attained proper-name status, including informal conventional names (
3551: 3492: 2720:). The first and last words in an English-language title are always capitalized. 2437: 2427: 2240: 2081: 2053: 1922: 943: 20209: 18630:
journal index, for topics likely to be covered in peer-reviewed academic papers.
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for English-language use. If a particular romanization of the subject's name is
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Official names (of companies, organizations, or places) should not be altered. (
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Integers from zero to nine are spelled out in words. Integers greater than nine
12484: 7836:– 1919) was a Ukrainian insurgent leader. He was also known as Matvii Hryhoriiv. 7315: 6562: 6075: 5908: 5760:"), especially when it is unfamiliar or should not be reworded by a non-expert: 5747:
The animal is listed as "Endangered" on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
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For the policy when a word or phrase itself may be an encyclopedic subject, see
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Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Animals, plants, and other organisms
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of any one article should all have the same format (day-first or month-first).
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or poem. This dash should not be fully spaced: however, for reasons related to
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between the 1961–1962 and 1967–1968 seasons, ticket sales dropped substantially
10325: 9539:). Some words of these sorts are nevertheless common without the hyphen (e.g., 8969: 8231: 7485:"I began to change, opening the way," said Turner, "to confidence and courage." 7477:"I began to change, opening the way", said Turner, "to confidence and courage." 6805: 6789: 6681: 6464: 6441: 6420: 6376: 6313: 5373: 4335: 3885: 3873: 3596: 3592: 3546: 3444: 3406: 2901: 2570: 2500: 2467: 2325: 2264: 2100: 1970:, since in HTML5 that XML-style syntax is valid only for certain tags, such as 1012: 967: 853: 111: 17979:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Cue sports § Respect for official organization names
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Spaced en dashes are sometimes used between parts of list items. For example:
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Another "planet" was detected – but it was later found to be a moon of Saturn.
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Also include commas when the geographical element is used as a disambiguator:
7469:"I began to change," said Turner, "opening the way to confidence and courage." 5833:
Knowledge:Neutral point of view § Attributing and specifying biased statements
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The animal is listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
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Knowledge:Neutral point of view § Attributing and specifying biased statements
4859:
A closely related use of italics is when introducing or distinguishing terms:
4778: 4169: 4120:
An abbreviation may or may not be terminated with a full point (also called a
20682: 18905: 18845: 18727:"T134423 Deprecate nonstandard behavior of self-closed HTML tags in wikitext" 18302: 18258: 18125: 17571: 17318: 17295: 17264: 17246: 17231: 17216: 17201: 17186: 17174: 17162: 17147: 17132: 17117: 17102: 17083: 17069: 17039: 16479:) clutter the page and make future maintenance harder. High-value links that 16250: 15925: 15836:
and their particular uses of small-caps (and italics and single quotes), see
15776: 15764: 15474: 15471:
can be used to apply the language markup without italicizing. Templates like
15447: 15435: 15274:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biographies § Child named for parent or predecessor
15156: 15104:
The colloquial dialect of Portuñol is similar to but different from Mirandese
14711: 14597: 14311: 14223: 13729: 13721: 13240: 12669: 12665: 12220: 11637:
to express a ratio, in a form in which a slash is conventionally used (e.g.,
11512: 10958: 10551:(which formats verse ranges into URLs), even if a range is embedded in them. 10306: 9511:). Hyphenation clarifies when the letters brought into contact are the same ( 9317:
He did not know, however, that the venue had been changed at the last minute.
9231:
It was obvious they could not convert these people; nevertheless, they tried.
6798: 6355: 6161: 5641: 5622: 5216: 5074:(The question mark applies to the whole sentence, not just to the emphasized 4884: 4491: 4478: 4376: 3152: 2838:). Standard or commonly used names of an office are treated as proper names ( 2483: 2370:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Strong national ties to a topic
1807: 1657:
blank lines, before or after, because that will add unwanted visible space).
1617: 1438: 1381: 1307: 1303: 1089: 16547: 16198: 16190:
text takes the image's place for those who are unable to see the image. See
15827:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Titles § Capitalization in foreign-language titles
15642: 13986: 13738: 13209:
In articles that are not specific to a country, express amounts of money in
13182:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Currencies and monetary values
12015:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Currencies and monetary values
11284:
James Galway – flute; Anne-Sophie Mutter – violin; Maurizio Pollini – piano.
10344:
Another "planet" was detected—but it was later found to be a moon of Saturn.
9944:
It is often possible to avoid multi-word hyphenated modifiers by rewording (
9330:
However, he did not know that the venue had been changed at the last minute.
9055:
This incorrect use of a comma between two independent clauses is known as a
8486:
Hantratty received a PhD from the University of California, Irvine, in 1977.
7461:"I began to change, opening the way to confidence and courage", said Turner. 6208: 5705:
for special considerations in normalizing the typography of titles of works.
5229:"WP:PMC" redirects here. For closure of requested moves by page movers, see 3410:
names of plants are not italicized, and are capitalized (including the word
18296: 17775: 17648: 16950: 16893: 16708: 16621: 15575: 15310: 15286:
Disputes over how to refer to a person or group are addressed by Knowledge
14777: 14098: 13545: 11829: 11693: 11388: 10613: 10435:
The birds – at least the ones Darwin collected – had red and blue feathers.
10365: 10145: 10126: 10008:), unless reliable sources consistently do otherwise in a particular case ( 9721:
to an independent current-English adjective. These need careful treatment:
9099: 9056: 8812:
Or be more specific when possible (the commas here set off non-restrictive
8679: 8627: 8498:
Hantratty received a PhD from the University of California, Irvine in 1977.
8400:
Schubert's heroes included Mozart, Beethoven, and Joseph and Michael Haydn.
8008: 7764:
He rose to address the meeting: "(Ahem) ... Ladies and gentlemen, welcome!"
7687: 6273: 5820: 5793:
LaVesque's report said that "the equipment was selected for its low price".
5726: 5428: 5358: 5315: 5305: 5212: 4670:
to handle emphasis in a customized way, and helps reusers and translators.
4452:, with a link if the term has not already been written out in the article: 3474: 3438: 2543:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Retaining the existing format
2413: 2104: 1782:
Not refer to a higher-level heading, unless doing so is shorter or clearer.
1595: 1427:
If the topic of a section is covered in more detail in a dedicated article
1290: 893: 14323: 12571:, and they also have smaller wing bones than flying birds of similar size. 11239:
The form of category names follows the corresponding main articles, e.g.,
9503:
There is a clear trend to join both elements in all varieties of English (
8941: 8851:
The author thanked her mother and musicians Kim Thayil and Sinéad O'Connor
8542:
He set October 1, 2011, as the deadline for Patterson to meet his demands.
7894:
She refused all requests (except for basics such as food, medicine, etc.).
7804:– 1919) (also known as Matvii Hryhoriiv) was a Ukrainian insurgent leader. 4511: 1281:– a concise summary of the article – which is never divided into sections 18424: 18311: 17781: 16701: 16089: 16081: 15050: 14315: 12967: 12935: 12898: 12049: 12033: 12027: 11782:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Common mathematical symbols
11411: 10726:
If negative values are involved, an unspaced en dash might be confusing:
10166:"WP:DASH" redirects here. For the overview of Knowledge discussions, see 10129:|Penn|syl|va|nia and Mass|a|chu|setts style themselves com|mon|wealths.}} 10112: 9609: 8554:
He set October 1, 2011 as the deadline for Patterson to meet his demands.
7820:– 1919; also known as Matvii Hryhoriiv) was a Ukrainian insurgent leader. 7018: 6265: 5753: 5598: 5236:"WP:PLC" redirects here. For inclusion guidelines for organizations, see 5141:"MOS:QUOTE" redirects here. For the section on quotation characters, see 5018: 4661: 3523:
A lynx is any of the four medium-sized wild cat species within the genus
3433: 2252: 2108: 1912: 1417: 1299:, images, and related content in the lead section must be right-aligned. 1174: 18814: 17881: 16437:– they are formatted consistently in either sentence case or lower case. 15825:
For the capitalization in the titles of non-English language works, see
12807:
change an article from one date format to the other without good reason.
11793: 11491:
tag, as the character gives a syntax error; instead use a normal hyphen
11365:
em dash may be used when attributing the source of a passage, such as a
9218:
It was obvious they could not convert these people; however, they tried.
7248:
Songs (albums, song cycles, operas, operettas, and oratorios italicized)
6886:
For quote marks in immediate succession, add a sliver of space by using
5231:
Knowledge:Requested moves/Closing instructions § Closure by a page mover
4720:
WP:Manual of Style § Punctuation §§ Quotation marks §§§ Names and titles
3270:), except in personifications or in proper names for periods or events ( 2591: 19660: 18519: 18486: 18340: 17832:– a script that will fix dashes in articles in accordance with MOS:DASH 17478:
disabled, browsing the mobile version, or using proxy services such as
17475: 16903:
visual cue and should be subtle (consider using lighter, less-dominant
16498: 16069: 15193:
identifies a set of members of a larger class. Common subset terms are
14830: 14635:
The Beatles were an English rock band that formed in Liverpool in 1960.
14474: 13850:). Exception: abstract nouns ending with an /s/ sound when followed by 13799: 13574: 12961: 12939: 12894: 12844: 12838: 12642:
only when they are germane and topical to the subject, as discussed at
11865: 11378: 10954:
Generally, use a hyphen in compounded proper names of single entities.
10151: 10027:
A hyphen is never followed or preceded by a space, except when hanging
9999: 9280:
However they tried, it was obvious they could not convert these people.
9251:
It was obvious they could not convert these people, however they tried.
8839: 8813: 8246: 8007:
If a URL itself contains square brackets, the wiki-text should use the
6480: 6091: 4013: 4001: 3486: 2982:). Common nouns for deities and religious figures are not capitalized ( 2712: 2383: 113: 16263: 15424:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Non-English language terms
13293:
The main unit in which a quantity is expressed should generally be an
12627: 11644:
in an expression or abbreviation widely used outside Knowledge (e.g.,
9952:). This is particularly important where converted units are involved ( 8615:
A comma may be included before a quotation embedded within a sentence
8341:
The newest member, John Smith – himself a retired teacher – was blunt.
8034: 7854:
X contains Y, and under certain circumstances, X may contain Z as well
7448:
By asking "Who are you?", da Gama prompts Adamastor to tell his story.
3072:
are capitalized only when referring to specific incidents or periods (
17784:– contains links to the style guides of some magazines and newspapers 17679:– we write for a general, not technical, readership as much as we can 17677:
Knowledge is not a manual, guidebook, textbook, or scientific journal
16508: 16467: 16460: 16379: 16363: 15618: 15591: 15242: 15143: 14787:. For an essay about not assuming the pronouns of other editors, see 13684: 13318:), imperial units are still used as the main units in some contexts ( 12817: 12811: 12283:
in captions or lists should in most cases not end with a period. See
12164:. Another exception are periodical publications carrying both, issue 11703: 11580:
In circumstances involving a distinction or disjunction, the en dash
9477: 8986: 8607:
She said, "The weather changes too often," and made other complaints.
8595:
She said, "The weather changes too often", and made other complaints.
8187:
Virginia's startled reply was "Could he ...? No, I can't believe it!"
7415: 7032: 6984:
In the bolded text typically appearing at the opening of an article:
6657: 6450: 5888: 5142: 4546: 4501: 3531: 3000:
are not capitalized, even if capitalized in a religion's scriptures (
2937: 2473: 1810:, which may break their display and cause other accessibility issues. 18347:
that no major organizations recognize as breeds. Many often are not
17937:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Proper names § Peoples and their languages
16636: 12295: 11855: 11146:
Do not use spaces around the en dash in any of the compounds above.
9337: 7159:
The report stated: "There was a 45% reduction in transmission rate."
7140:
children – specifically those children "who are coming to terms...")
7104:
The report stated, "There was a 45% reduction in transmission rate."
6298: 6158:(except for non-Latin-based writing systems, and best done with the 5240:. For the handling of the abbreviation "plc" in article titles, see 3979: 3880:
in a context that already makes the subject clear, as distinct from
3772:
Composite directions may or may not be hyphenated, depending on the
3670:
The planet Mars is in the constellation Gemini, near the star Pollux
18336: 17719: 17653:
for templates that link to these keys. For English pronunciations,
17642: 16892:). Avoid low contrast between text and background colors. See also 16722: 16522: 16192:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Alternative text for images
15838:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § All caps and small caps
15702:
Spell a name consistently in the title and the text of an article.
15491: 14588:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Words to watch § Relative time references
14372: 14265: 13696:
Variables are italicized, but digits and punctuation are not; only
13552: 12991:, which will allow editors to catalog and update dated statements. 12978:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Words to watch § Relative time references
12739: 12659: 11820:
unless other constructions would be lengthy or awkward. Instead of
11596: 10754:
In compounds when the connection might otherwise be expressed with
9075: 8080: 7950: 7930: 7890:
those brackets, regardless of any punctuation within the brackets.
7432:
Livingston then exclaimed, "It is done!", and turned to the people.
7228:
Quotation marks should be used for the following names and titles:
7090:
The report stated "There was a 45% reduction in transmission rate."
5856: 5457:
Siskel and Ebert called the film "interesting but heart-wrenching".
4845:(to discuss grammar, wording, punctuation, etc.) is different from 4257:. In longer abbreviations that incorporate the country's initials ( 4089: 3400: 2374:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Unit choice and order
2291:
the trunk (American English) or boot (British English) of a car ...
2279: 2275: 1069:
A title should be a recognizable name or description of the topic,
109: 18920: 17863:– a quick directory of community norms and related guidance essays 17703:– guidelines for film, novels, biographies, military history, etc. 16857:
to mark differences in text: they may be invisible to people with
16448: 16106: 15742:; or when being compared to other names for the same subject in a 15021:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Self-references to avoid § Note that ...
13288:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Units of measurement
12622:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Mathematics § Punctuation after formulae
11632:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Long periods of time
11621:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Fractions and ratios
10161: 8861: 8847:
The author thanked Kim Thayil, Sinéad O'Connor, and her own mother
8210: 7264:
The Beatles wrote "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" for their album
7146:(Changes the meaning to imply Jenner was expressing concern about 7093: 6047:
What this grim, ungainly, ghastly, gaunt, and ominous bird of yore
5302:. If there is a significant error in the original, follow it with 4631: 4356:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Units of measurement
4316: 2942:, including proper names and titles, start with a capital letter ( 1464:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Layout § Standard appendices and footers
1208:), or when a closing round bracket or quotation mark is required ( 20576: 16671: 16369:
Do not use lists if a passage is read easily as plain paragraphs.
12956:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Chronological items
12902: 12851: 12634:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Chronological items
11326: 10217: 10207: 7748: 7353:
Knowledge:Manual of Style § Italics: Effect on nearby punctuation
7098:
The report stated there was a 45% reduction in transmission rate.
6382: 5928:, indented on both sides. Block quotations should be enclosed in 5815:
equipment was selected for its low price", according to LaVesque.
5503: 5499: 5130:
Knowledge:Do not include the full text of lengthy primary sources
4890: 4650:. But overuse diminishes its effect; consider rewriting instead. 4568: 4505: 3672:). The first letter of every word in such a name is capitalized ( 3516: 3510: 2635:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Capitalization of The
2230: 1978:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Linking § Avoiding broken section links
18849:(Oxford University Press). A compressed edition is available as 16095: 15983:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Abbreviations § Special considerations
15804:
For handling of quotations in languages other than English, see
15784:
Sometimes usage will be influenced by other guidelines, such as
15669: 15661: 15088:
This was subject to controversy in more conservative newspapers.
14744:, which have little place in formal writing. For example, write 10873:; but prefer spelling out when using words instead of numerals: 9048:
Oranges are an acidic fruit, bananas are classified as alkaline.
9036:
Oranges are an acidic fruit; bananas are classified as alkaline.
8765:
The author thanked two friends – Sinéad O'Connor and Bob Marley.
7129:
Do not insert a comma if it would confuse or alter the meaning:
6869:
For deeper nesting, alternate between single and double quotes:
6174: 2547:"WP:RETAIN" redirects here. For the general editing policy, see 1767:
Not redundantly refer back to the subject of the article, e.g.,
1100:), except where title case would be used in ordinary prose. See 18226:
to the old section title. That advanced search does not search
17790:– explains the codes and resources available for editing a page 17462:
parameter of relevant templates, or manually-added CSS classes
16881: 16865: 16532: 16526: 16077: 15922:. For example, consider adding a brief background section with 15885: 15688: 14693:
the ruin of a prehistoric Irish cliff fort. Its original shape
13467:
For a negative sign or subtraction operator, use a minus sign (
13134:. "Percent" is American usage, and "per cent" is British usage 12854:, which are different in the southern and northern hemispheres. 11683:. For short constructions, both spaces should be non-breaking: 10964: 10894:;   avoid using a slash (stroke) here, which indicates division 10656:(and note in this case that the second element of the range is 9458: 9360: 9300:
If the two clauses cannot be swapped, a semicolon is required.
8781:
The author thanked Sinéad O'Connor, Bob Marley, and her friends
7678:
administration received U.S. support for its economic policies.
7411: 7242:
Individual strips from comics and webcomics (comics italicized)
7109:
The comma-free approach is often used with partial quotations:
6397: 5671: 5402:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Words to watch § Expressions of doubt
5196:
unless the material would be italicized for some other reason.
4068:
Except in special circumstances, common abbreviations (such as
3881: 3504: 3147: 2463: 2423: 19661: 18712: 18476:, with parties, result, and number order in logical agreement. 17941:
Names of ships in article titles and in the body of articles:
17697:– a list of advice for editors on writing style and formatting 16880:
mark the differences with change of font or some other means (
15017:
Knowledge:Writing better articles § Information style and tone
14915:
to another unless there is a substantial reason to do so. See
14706: 13429:. The percent sign and units of degrees, minutes, and seconds 13175: 10031:
or when used to display parts of words independently, such as
10002:, follow the capitalization rule for each part independently ( 8836:
The author thanked her mother, Kim Thayil, and Sinéad O'Connor
8808:
The author thanked Bob Marley and her friend, Sinéad O'Connor.
8790:
The author thanked Bob Marley, Sinéad O'Connor and her friends
8775:
The author thanked Sinéad O'Connor, Bob Marley and her friends
8759:
The author thanked her friends Sinéad O'Connor and Bob Marley.
8733:
The author thanked her friends, Sinéad O'Connor and Bob Marley
5509:
Convert apostrophes and quotation marks to Knowledge's style:
5123: 4716:(provides greater detail than the section you are reading now) 4693: 3942:
should be used in languages in which they are standard (hence
3818:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Capitalization of
2718:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Composition titles
1117:{{DISPLAYTITLE:​Interpretations of ''2001: A Space Odyssey''}} 1115:
near the top of the article. For mixed situations, use, e.g.,
114: 19720: 18726: 17991:
Names of animal and plant species, etc. (in article titles):
17823: 16518: 16475: 15939:
For italicization and other markup of introduced terms, see:
15788:, which may lead to different choices in different articles. 15695:
Use of diacritics is determined on a topic-by-topic basis; a
15665: 15562:
Knowledge:Naming conventions (use English) § Modified letters
14378: 13559: 13214: 11861: 10521:
For ranges between numbers, dates, or times, use an en dash:
10378:
Do not insert any spaces where an en dash should be unspaced
10115:
to mark locations where a word will be broken and hyphenated
8826:
The author thanked Bob Marley, Sinéad O'Connor, and a friend.
8242: 7427:
Livingston then said, "It is done", and turned to the people.
6361: 6055:
Or quote such material inline, with line breaks indicated by
5783:
said that"), the original capital letter may be lower-cased.
5418:
The site is considered "sacred" by the religion's scriptures.
4913: 4908:
Use italics for the scientific names of plants, animals, and
4876:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Non-English terms
4580: 4436:
If it is necessary to abbreviate in a tight space, such as a
3910:
Knowledge:Naming conventions (use English) § Modified letters
3537: 2443: 2258: 1084:
Capitalize the initial letter (except in rare cases, such as
18396:
to mean the entire show as a whole. A season (also called a
17637:
IPA transcriptions are best for English pronunciations. See
17420:
be collapsed by default. This applies equally to content in
15090:
Similar variants which indirectly instruct readers, such as
14197: 14087:
In historical articles to mean the modern world as a whole:
11840:. Where more than two possibilities are present, instead of 11699:
added after the slash will allow a linebreak at that point.
11671:
to separate items that include at least one internal space (
9723:
Early flowering plants appeared around 130 million years ago
9417: 8978:
For usage in marking up description (definition) lists, see
8739:
The author thanked a friend, Sinéad O'Connor, and Bob Marley
5548:
Remove spaces before punctuation such as periods and colons.
5363:
to indicate that the text is quoted as shown in the source.
3903: 3619:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Celestial bodies
1608:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Section headings
1604:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Layout § Order of article elements
20395: 16887: 16871: 16073: 15626:
from alternative forms that include or exclude diacritics.
15205:
Avoid redundant subset terms (e.g., mis-constructions like
14257:"; let the browser's normal highlighting invite a click. (" 13358:), except for unit names that are hardly ever spelled out ( 11868:. Keys for these symbols can be found at the bottom of the 11630:), if that is the convention used in reliable sources (see 8293:
Janet Cooper's son, John Smith, is a well-known playwright.
8268:
John Smith, Janet Cooper's son, is a well-known playwright.
7874:
To make the grammar work: Referring to someone's statement
7114:
The report observed "a 45% reduction in transmission rate".
6340: 5587:, etc. should generally be normalized to plain text. If it 4174:"MOS:US" redirects here. For the use of the word "us", see 3094:
use lower case unless the name derives from a proper name (
2282:, so that all variants can be used in searches and linking. 1867:==Implications==<!--This comment causes problems.--: --> 1485:; avoid "Bibliography", confusable with the subject's works 1170: 17664: 17458:
When hiding content is desired, it must be done using the
15941:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Words as words
13255:); subsequent occurrences can use the currency sign (just 12861:) or when referring to a phase of a natural yearly cycle ( 10849:; red and green are separate independent colors, not mixed 8104:
Knowledge's style for an ellipsis is three unspaced dots (
6951:(simply jamming things together looks awful in most fonts) 5661: 5651: 4785:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Words as words
3714:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Compass points
3651:
The tribal people thought of the whole earth as their home
3414:
in the name); cultivar names appear within single quotes (
3224:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Calendar items
3201:
except when the phrase is itself a proper name (e.g., the
3127:
are capitalized in the context of philosophical doctrine (
3038:. Capitalize the names or titles of individual creatures ( 1738:
As a matter of consistent style, section headings should:
1612:
Section headings should generally follow the guidance for
992:
style in an article to a different style may generally be
977:
Edit-warring over style, or enforcing optional style in a
18269:
what they indicate from the late 20th century and onward.
17968:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biographies § Opening paragraph
16787:
reduces consistency, as the text no longer looks uniform;
16390:
Indents (such as this) are permitted if the elements are
15798: 15494:
and borrowed phrases that have common usage in English –
15013:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Words to watch § Editorializing
13683:
other unary operators, such as the exclamation mark as a
13520: 13356:
Up to 15 kilograms of filler is used for a batch of 250kg
12954:
More information on all the above topics can be found at
12950:. Omit AD or CE unless omitting it would cause ambiguity. 12676:
Twelve-hour clock times are written in one of two forms:
10540: 8280:
Janet Cooper's son John Smith is a well-known playwright.
8154:"But what of the other cities? London, Paris{{nbsp}}...?" 6535: 5703:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Titles § Typographic conformity
5628: 3480: 3139:). Use capitals for personifications represented in art ( 2099:) is also related to national varieties of English – see 1874:<!--This comment breaks the heading completely.--: --> 1289:. The remainder of the article is typically divided into 908:. If any contradiction arises, this page has precedence. 18474:
Jameson lost the election, 2345 votes to 6789, to Garcia
17728:– is a well-constructed sample article, with annotations 17023:) will never be used as a line-break point. Markup: for 16431:– they retain the original capitalization of the titles; 15664:
is so spelt, with redirects from the ligature-free form
15428:
Non-English terms should be used sparingly. In general,
13952:, but where rewording is an option, this may be better: 13376:
Use "per" when writing out a unit, rather than a slash:
13022: 12332:
Some editors place two spaces after a period/full stop (
10398:(deemed too complex for the target audience) – and Kant. 10133:
_and_soft_hyphens" title="Help:Line-break handling": -->
9563:
aids) and are particularly useful in long noun phrases:
9017:
Though he had been here before; I did not recognize him.
9005:
Though he had been here before, I did not recognize him.
8138:
But where an ellipsis is immediately followed by any of
7294:
Many, but not all, of the above items should also be in
7233:
Articles and chapters (books and periodicals italicized)
6764: 6381:), should be represented by those templates or by their 5029:"Now cracks a noble heart. Good night sweet prince: And 4595: 4440:, use widely recognized abbreviations. For example, for 3814:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters § Institutions
3653:). They are capitalized when the entity is personified ( 3137:
Superman represents American ideals of truth and justice
2651:. Conventional exceptions include certain proper names ( 2588:
may be placed on an editor's talk page to explain this.
2196:
Knowledge:Naming conventions (chemistry) § Element names
2040:
Knowledge:Article titles § National varieties of English
17887:(Links to policy and guidelines on specific questions) 17760:– gives a list of common mistakes and how to avoid them 17752:– point-by-point guidance on what makes a great article 17734:– lists the ways in which you can help an article grow 16470:
only where they are relevant and helpful in the context
14844:
When any student breaks that rule, she loses privileges
14640:
Barack Obama is a former president of the United States
14231:. Other constructions may be preferable if the pronoun 12644:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Linking § Chronological items
11675:), where for some reason use of a slash is unavoidable. 8329:
Blunt comments came from the newest member, John Smith.
7759:
mark, another opening bracket, or a portion of a word:
7400:
Miller wanted, he said, "to create something timeless".
7381:(incorrect to apply the question mark to the quotation) 7251:
Individual episodes of television and radio series and
7169:
No additional punctuation is necessary for an explicit
6664:) marks as quotation marks (except when such marks are 5850: 5520: 4627:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Italic type
4230:(since 2010), now deprecate "U.S." and recommend "US". 3313:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Italic type
3197:). An entire phrase in which an eponym is an adjective 3030:), although in works of fantasy, such as the novels of 2335:
Comparison of American and British English § Vocabulary
1506:
The following final items never take section headings:
1277:
An article's content should begin with an introductory
1121:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Italic type
18423:, which are modifiers of a noun that occur within the 17857:– a comprehensive descriptive directory of guidelines 17772:– explains process and standards for citing references 17685:– a quick introduction to the style guide for articles 16861:
and useless in black-and-white printouts or displays.
16044: 14736:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Abbreviations § Contractions
13798:
For thorough treatment of the English possessive, see
13591:
plus, minus, and plus-or-minus (as binary operators):
12219:"MOS:PERIOD" redirects here. For periods of time, see 11734: 10132: 9958:
the rule imposing a limit of six hectares (14.8 acres)
9559:
Hyphens can aid ease of reading (that is, they can be
8842:
is male and wouldn't be the same person as the mother.
8744:
In such cases of ambiguity, clarify one of four ways:
8671:"MOS:OXFORD" redirects here. For Oxford spelling, see 7977: 7964: 4301:), or in certain technical and formal uses (e.g., the 3655:
Sol Invictus ('Unconquered Sun') was the Roman sun god
3141:
the guidebook mentioned statues of Justice and Liberty
2840:
David Cameron was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
2792:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biography § Titles of people
1220:
Whenever quotation marks or apostrophes appear, add a
18652:
The "Mobile sidebar preview" tool near the bottom of
18108:
and to revocation of semi-automated tools privileges.
17983:
Names that are also trademarks (dedicated MOS page):
17608:
This notation can be inserted with a single click in
16970:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Indentation
16935:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Indentation
15660:
Similarly, the name of the article on the Nordic god
15356:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biography § Gender identity
15327:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biography § Gender identity
15006:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Music § Images and notation
14917:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Military history § Pronouns
14370:
Use the appropriate plural; allow for cases (such as
14171:"WP:YOU" redirects here. For "Knowledge is not about 13029:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Numbers
12865:). Otherwise, neutral wording is usually preferable ( 12792:
Dates in quotations and titles are always left as-is.
12719:
Twenty-four-hour clock times are written in the form
12149:, unless a volume is also given, in which case write 12138:
reached numbers one and three in the UK albums chart.
11733: 9727:
Early-flowering plants risk damage from winter frosts
9098:(reporting brisk conversation, such as this reply of 7736:. For deprecated inline parenthetical citations, see 7405:
Miller said: "I wanted to create something timeless."
7210:(both summarize details at WP:Manual of Style/Titles) 7208:
WP:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Names and titles
6691:
Quotation marks and apostrophes in imported material
4714:
WP:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Names and titles
3862:
The two towns merged to become the City of Smithville
3046:) and of groups whose name and membership are fixed ( 48:
is a part of the English Knowledge's Manual of Style.
18884:(Oxford University Press; primarily British English) 18550:
The break-in was reported to police the next morning
18505:) is relatively obscure, and the named HTML entity " 18453:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Ranges
18002: 17925:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Proper names § Place names
17851:– a comprehensive, descriptive directory of policies 17673:– explains Knowledge's general philosophy of editing 16443: 16402:
a need to refer to the elements by number may arise;
16372:
Use proper wiki markup- or template-based list code
16305:
Most captions are not complete sentences but merely
14783:
For an essay with suggestions and sample usage, see
14604:
Knowledge:Writing better articles § Tense in fiction
14592:
Knowledge:Writing better articles § Tense in fiction
13913:, form the possessive by adding just an apostrophe ( 13664:
positive, negative, and positive-or-negative signs:
13333:
the Murray River is 2,375 kilometres (1,476 mi) long
13329:
the Mississippi River is 2,320 miles (3,734 km) long
12078:
Her album reached number one in the UK albums chart.
11097:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Ratios
10517:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers § Ranges
9715:
adverbs, because they are not formed by addition of
8690:) is a comma used immediately before a conjunction ( 8376:
Burke and Wills, fed by locals (on beans, fish, and
8360:
Burke and Wills, fed by locals (on beans, fish, and
5752:
Italics can be used to mark a particular usage as a
5512:
These should be straight, not curly or slanted. See
4638:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting § Emphasis
2563: 1852:==Implications<!--This comment works fine.--: --> 1695:, especially where only part of a heading is linked. 18841:
is free online, and summarizes the main provisions.
18622:
of a place name, loanwords, etc. It may also help (
18548:shift to dwelling on a non-notable party. Contrast 18509:" is not standard and unsupported in some browsers. 18319: 17931:
Knowledge:Manual of Style/Proper names § Diacritics
16768:Modifications in font size, blank space, and color 16599: 15641:The name of the article on Hungarian mathematician 15302:when the term appears in the title of an article). 14261:" also makes no sense to someone reading on paper.) 14011:
Knowledge:Writing better articles § Use of pronouns
13299:
non-SI unit officially accepted for use with the SI
12013:For pound sterling and other currency symbols, see 11664:
to separate run-on lines in quoted poetry or song (
11639:
the price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E ratio for short
11563:
The parent/instructor must be present at all times.
9586:is a program that monitors the government, whereas 9367:) indicate conjunction. There are three main uses: 6094:do not belong in Knowledge articles. These are the 5603:) or, in an already-italic passage, boldface (with 3625:
Knowledge:Naming conventions (astronomical objects)
3244:refers only to the US Independence Day – otherwise 15785: 15405:WP:Manual of Style/Lead section § Foreign language 15401:WP:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Other languages 15210:the most well-known members of the fraternity are 14518: 14514: 13909:For a normal plural noun ending with a pronounced 13370: 13137: 11760: 11554:, also called a forward slash, stroke or solidus ( 11463:), which can also be generated by clicking on the 10856:; a blended, intermediate color, so use a hyphen: 10741:might work in a table consistently formatted with 8581: 8110:); do not use the precomposed ellipsis character ( 5238:Knowledge:Notability (organizations and companies) 4897:WP:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Other languages 4234: 3773: 2881:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Titles § Religious texts 1814:These are broadly accepted community preferences. 1626:Funding of UNESCO Projects in Developing Countries 1622:Funding of UNESCO projects in developing countries 1600:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Headings 1393:, which is optional (except in special cases like 1028: 997: 16629:Add external links with discretion; Knowledge is 16241:Textual information should always be transmitted 15818:For actual non-English quotation characters, see 15797:For non-English vernacular names of species, see 15460:Category:Knowledge multilingual support templates 15231:does not introduce a complete list; instead, use 14658:is a radio show that aired live from 1974 to 2016 14644:Barack Obama was a president of the United States 14206:Use a noun or a third-person pronoun: instead of 13197:unless the currency is already clear from context 12920:), unless the meaning would otherwise be unclear. 12548:must be added, and this is usually placed in the 11681:My mama told me&nbsp;/ You better shop around 10619:between them will provide the proper formatting. 10458:In ranges that might otherwise be expressed with 10290:) as a substitute for an en dash, for example in 7352: 5498:. Use the style chosen for the article: unspaced 5412:Siskel and Ebert called the film "unforgettable". 4839:The preposition in "She sat on the chair" is "on" 4722:(summarizes details at WP:Manual of Style/Titles) 4497: 4373:except in an infobox or table (in which case use 4297:except in a quotation, as part of a proper name ( 4176:Knowledge:Manual of Style § First-person pronouns 2341:; most dictionaries also indicate regional terms. 2339:American and British English spelling differences 2270:If a variant spelling appears in a title, make a 20680: 19873:Do not include copies of lengthy primary sources 18594:of an anti-diacritics "wikiproject", the policy 18431:English compound § Hyphenated compound modifiers 18043:These matters have been addressed in rulings of 17951:Naming and identifying individuals and peoples: 17935:Peoples and languages that share the same name: 16137:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Images 15880:Knowledge:Make technical articles understandable 15073:make presumptions about readers' knowledge, may 12288: 12262:For the use of three periods in succession, see 11836:); or, for emphasis or precision or both, write 11445:For a negative sign or subtraction operator use 9567:. But never insert a hyphen into a proper name ( 9461:with their main terms in certain constructions ( 7734:WP:Article titles § Parenthetical disambiguation 7236:Short stories (books and periodicals italicized) 7014:part of the article title should not be bolded. 5713: 5427:regarding the material being quoted; sarcasm or 4759:Italics are not used for major religious works ( 3730:), except where they are parts of proper names ( 3092:Philosophies, theories, movements, and doctrines 3008:Broad categories of mythical or legendary beings 2611: 2559: 1799:Not use color or unusual fonts that might cause 1660:For technical reasons, section headings should: 989: 904:, which are cross-referenced here and listed at 18775:element may not always be bold, and that of an 18120: 18118: 18116: 18114: 16831:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Color 16780:and should be reserved for special cases only. 16256:For entering textual information as audio, see 16016:Knowledge:Naming conventions (geographic names) 16006:Knowledge:Naming conventions (geographic names) 15979:Knowledge:Naming conventions (geographic names) 15574:Names and terms originally written using a non- 15098:, may be rewritten by leaving out those words: 13482:For multiplication, use a multiplication sign ( 13092:) is preferred in scientific contexts. Markup: 9756:itself is modified) and even predicatively, if 9303:A sentence or clause can also contain the word 8027:. This will avoid truncation of the link after 7390:(question mark applies to quoted material only) 7053:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biography § Nicknames 5451:Siskel and Ebert called the film "interesting". 5097:Four of Patrick White's most famous novels are 4485:<abbr title="World Health Organization": --> 4344:, is preferred over circa, c., ca., or approx. 3856:Treat political or geographic units similarly: 3698:Halley's Comet is the most famous of the comets 3054:). Generalized references are not capitalized ( 2858:); exceptions may apply for particular offices. 1967:==Implications<span id="Consequences" /: --> 1880:It is more usual practice to put such comments 1538:, if needed, which should follow the categories 1150:), unless it is an inseparable part of a name ( 1078:Knowledge:Article titles § Article title format 20035:Do not disrupt Knowledge to illustrate a point 17766:– suggests a bold attitude toward page updates 16302:Captions normally start with a capital letter. 16219:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Accessibility § Text 16039: 14996:"MOS:NOTE" redirects here. For footnotes, see 13621:equals, does not equal, equals approximately: 11761:{\displaystyle \textstyle {\frac {x^{n}}{n!}}} 11310: 11234:a Rodgers and Hammerstein–esque musical number 10936:a pro-establishment–anti-intellectual alliance 10539:Do not change hyphens to dashes in filenames, 10315: 9998:. In titles of published works, when given in 8924: 7239:Sections of musical pieces (pieces italicized) 6684:and double prime: these are used to designate 5004: 4242: 3992:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biography § Initials 3135:); used more broadly, they are in lower case ( 2538: 1939:<span class="anchor" id="Consequences": --> 916: 20592: 19706: 18936: 18620:determining the most widely accepted spelling 17962:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biographies § Names 16794:or inconvenience people with color blindness 16497:links to a particular section of the article 15682: 15676: 15409:Category:Knowledge Manual of Style (regional) 14216:When a player passes "Go", they collect $ 200 13015:As of March 2011, he is the ambassador to ... 12647: 11569:.) Must at least one be present? (Then write 11333:components less strongly than a hyphen would 11142:with a hyphen: named after John Lennard-Jones 10381: 9824:) when two compound modifiers are separated ( 9623:(descriptive phrase separated from the noun: 8095: 7738:WP:Citing sources § Parenthetical referencing 7418:(period), and do not replace it with a comma 7414:that should be preceded by a comma, omit the 6811: 6744:Plant cultivars take single quotation marks ( 6736:Most quotations take double quotation marks ( 5968: 5811:The program was criticized primarily because 5445:Siskel and Ebert called the film interesting. 3825:Capitalize names of particular institutions ( 2998:Pronouns for figures of veneration or worship 2822:Three prime ministers attended the conference 1102:Knowledge:Naming conventions (capitalization) 861: 20461: 18265:are updated through 2019, and we frequently 18111: 17871:– about advice pages written by WikiProjects 17445:those with limited CSS or JavaScript support 16173:Knowledge:Image use policy § Image galleries 16014:places, according to the rules described at 15735: 15629:Proper names in languages written using the 14600:, including those covering works of fiction 14081:We note that some believe that bats are bugs 12602: 12596: 12552:section, near the end of the article in the 12066:Her album reached #1 in the UK albums chart. 11860:Unicode symbols are preferred over composed 11723:. In more advanced mathematical formulas, a 11573:.) Are they the same person? (Use a hyphen: 11475:toolbar beneath the edit window. Do not use 11345:components less strongly than a slash would 11054:, not an independent word, so use a hyphen: 11038:was especially popular with Indian Americans 10972:, a single city named after two people, but 10945:the ballerina's rapid walk–dance transitions 9476:A hyphen may be used to distinguish between 7743:This section applies to both round brackets 6472:For usage of the possessive apostrophe, see 6297:Letters resembling apostrophes, such as the 5559:, but most other styling should be altered. 5537: 5194:It is incorrect to put quotations in italics 4942:), nor is the "connecting term" required in 4483:can be used for abbreviations and acronyms: 4358:for when to abbreviate units of measurement. 2775: 2762: 2048:National varieties of English (for example, 1961:is used directly, that undesirable behavior 1547:have some additional layout considerations. 1119:, instead. Use of italics should conform to 20367:Categories, lists, and navigation templates 19561:Categories, lists, and navigation templates 18881:Fowler's Dictionary of Modern English Usage 18289:. Linguistics/orthography use of the terms 18283:describes a patient exhibiting symptoms of 16102:Knowledge:Creation and usage of media files 15805: 15150: 14760:is an exception. Contracted titles such as 14584:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Biography § Tense 14398: 13076:units. Keep articles internally consistent. 12931:that could refer to ten or a hundred years. 12416:He made several films with Sammy Davis Jr.. 12326: 12284: 12022:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers 11828:(which would normally be interpreted as an 11438:or other substitutes, such as two hyphens ( 9599:(adjectives before the nouns they qualify: 8830:Clarity with gender-specific terms such as 7272:Do not use quotation marks or italics for: 6778: 6692: 6669: 5773:on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 5530:the Manual of Style for English quote marks 5367: 4642:Italics are used for emphasis, rather than 4572: 4110:Three CD-ROM's and two BIOS's were released 2905:are capitalized, but often not italicized ( 2863:Religions, deities, philosophies, doctrines 2666:may not be part of the title itself, e.g., 2162: 759:Categories, lists, and navigation templates 20599: 20585: 19713: 19699: 18943: 18929: 18654:Special:Preferences#mw-prefsection-gadgets 18535: 18533: 18437: 18171:, especially when a shorter construction ( 17412:" information. Templates should generally 16783:Typically, the use of custom font styles: 15710:Knowledge:Naming conventions (use English) 14208:When you move past "Go", you collect $ 200 13954:The career of each Dumas was controversial 13950:The two Dumas's careers were controversial 13399: 12428:He made several films with Sammy Davis Jr. 11550:Generally, avoid joining two words with a 9954:the 6-hectare-limit (14.8-acre-limit) rule 9744:precedes a participle used attributively ( 9740:A hyphen is normally used when the adverb 8726:or a series of probably unfamiliar terms. 6008:for poetry, lyrics, and similar material: 5967:(For use of dashes with attributions, see 4771:). Many of these titles should also be in 4175: 4102:Three CD-ROMs and two BIOSes were released 4080:) need not be expanded even on first use. 3833:) but not generic words for institutions ( 3801: 3437:are given in lower case in article prose ( 3195:complained of draconian workplace policies 2830:, such words begin with a capital letter ( 2086:Comparison of American and British English 1785:Not be numbered or lettered as an outline. 1490:Knowledge is not a bibliographic directory 868: 854: 18855:Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors 18596:Knowledge:Consensus § Levels of consensus 18479: 18252: 18250: 18248: 18246: 18244: 18242: 18240: 18206: 17746:– guidance on how to make articles better 17612:, just under the edit pane in edit mode. 16776:are an issue for the Knowledge site-wide 16764:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Text formatting 16483:worth pursuing should stand out clearly. 16405:the sequence of the items is critical; or 16399:Use numbers rather than bullets only if: 15819: 14198:§ Instructional and presumptuous language 13369:Most unit names are not capitalized (see 13239:Since 2001 the grant has been 10,000,000 12787:Knowledge:Citing sources § Citation style 10840:; not separate persons, so use a hyphen: 10205:Two forms of dash are used on Knowledge: 10119:at the end of a line of text, usually in 9689:function as both adjectives and adverbs ( 8200:She retorted: "How do I feel? How do you 7372:(question mark applies to whole sentence) 7222:WP:Manual of Style/Music § Capitalization 6253:). Do not use accent marks or backticks ( 4808:or a string of words up to one sentence ( 4731:WP:Manual of Style/Music § Capitalization 4687:The meerkat is {{em|not}} actually a cat. 3784:are more common in American English; but 3757:), and derived terms for people (e.g., a 2616:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters 2598:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Capital letters 1944:<!-- Section linked from ], ]. --: --> 1927:<!-- Section linked from ], ]. --: --> 1501:link templates for sister-project content 1242:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Titles of works 988:Unjustified changes from one acceptable, 18612: 18464:It is not logically possible to have a " 18447:ranges was implemented in July 2016 per 18185: 18183: 18181: 18102:Knowledge:AutoWikiBrowser § Rules of use 18017:Knowledge:Consensus § Level of consensus 17513:unnecessarily list-formatted information 17315:), or as templates that generate these ( 16358:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Embedded lists 14488:the Netherlands is also known as Holland 13187:Use the full abbreviation on first use ( 12943: 12863:migration typically starts in mid-spring 12693: 10982:, an individual named after two families 9674:The idea clearly was stated often enough 9593:Compounds that are hyphenated when used 9578:A hyphen can help to disambiguate (some 8838:is unclear because readers may not know 8584:. This is known as "logical quotation". 8317:The newest member, John Smith was blunt. 7909:Square brackets inside of links must be 7410:If the quoted sentence is followed by a 7347:Knowledge:Logical quotation on Knowledge 6688:, and not as apostrophes or quote marks. 5355:does so, copy the text verbatim and use 5242:Knowledge:Naming conventions (companies) 3851:The International Cat Association (TICA) 3378:) but not in their English equivalents ( 2610:. For capitalization of list items, see 2333:For assistance with specific terms, see 2274:page to accommodate the others, as with 1860:==<!--This comment works fine.--: --> 1653:is optional and ignored (but do not use 923:over stylistic choices is unacceptable. 18914:) is being considered for merging. See 18530: 18272: 18090: 18009: 17622:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Pronunciation 17594:(there are bots which can do this, see 17509:dividing the article into more sections 17451:of readers (more than 60%) who use the 17347:Scrolling lists and collapsible content 17303:Insert non-breaking and thin spaces as 16177:linking to additional images on Commons 15935:, generally do not have such sections. 15109:Avoid rhetorical questions, especially 14939:Instructional and presumptuous language 13202:Use only one symbol with ranges, as in 11822:Most had trauma and/or smoke inhalation 11121:(developed by Seeliger and Donker-Voet) 10603:between the 1961–62 and 1967–68 seasons 10225:). To enter them, click on them in the 9678:The idea was stated with enough clarity 9617:) are usually not hyphenated when used 9590:is a government program that monitors). 8204:I ... This is too much!  Take me home!" 6423:romanizations of Mandarin Chinese, use 5615:. Italics can also be added to mark up 3986:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Abbreviations 3888:. When in doubt, use the full name for 3827:the founding of the University of Delhi 3702:The Andromeda Galaxy is a spiral galaxy 3307:For more detail on capitalization, see 2235:is preferred to the national varieties 1932:which will be saved in the article as: 1836: 1459:immediately under the section heading. 1036:Article titles, sections, and headings 14: 20681: 18749: 18237: 17919:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Proper names 17740:– gives helpful advice on copy-editing 17552:For invisible control characters, see 16600:National Institutes of Health homepage 16258:Knowledge:WikiProject Spoken Knowledge 15799:§ Animals, plants, and other organisms 15418:Terms without common usage in English 14929:List of commonly misused English words 14365:Knowledge:Naming conventions (plurals) 14248:Impurities are removed before bottling 12727:, with no suffix. Midnight written as 12712:; it may need to be specified whether 11257:To separate parts of an item in a list 9697:). Some such dual-purpose words (like 9650:Avoid using a hyphen after a standard 8908:A colon may also be used to introduce 8754:Recast the sentence ("friends" case): 7204:WP:Manual of Style § Italics §§ Titles 6695:if necessary to comply with the above. 6526:Knowledge:Manual of Style § Quotations 5954:and so on only for actual quotations; 5837:. When attributing a quotation, avoid 5115:(The commas, the period, and the word 4932:). The hybrid sign is not italicized ( 4889:template and its variants support all 3835:the high school is near the university 3336:, capitalize and italicize the genus: 3230:Months, days of the week, and holidays 2676:There are special considerations for: 2639:Generally, do not capitalize the word 2171:use the subject's own spelling, e.g., 1285:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Lead section 64:. When in doubt, discuss first on the 27:Style guide for all Knowledge articles 20580: 19694: 18924: 18626:) to compare search results from the 18178: 18072:For the origin of this phrasing, see 18066: 17876:Guidelines within the Manual of Style 17691:– test your Manual of Style knowledge 17561:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Hidden text 15633:can include letters with diacritics, 15110: 14513:, it refers to the country. See also 14511:England is in the Northern hemisphere 14484:the United States is in North America 14363:For the article title guideline, see 13870:would be difficult to pronounce with 13462:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Mathematics 13109:MOS:NUM § Numbers as figures or words 13044:MOS:NUM § Numbers as figures or words 12716:refers to the start or end of a date. 12646:. For ranges of dates and times, see 11366: 10940:Singapore–Sumatra–Java shipping lanes 10881:;  avoid confusingly reversed order: 9971:For optional hyphenation of compound 8803:Recast the sentence ("friend" case): 7266:Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band 7245:Poems (long or epic poems italicized) 7136:(Accurate quote of a statement about 6955:He announced, "The answer was 'Yes!'" 6949:He announced, "The answer was 'Yes!'" 6607:ones. (For single-apostrophe quotes: 5984:Line breaks and indentation inside a 5616: 5000: 4821:the most common letter in English is 4719: 4459:. Do not make up initialisms such as 4383: 3792:in British English. In cases such as 3645:do not take capitals in general use ( 2751: 2655:) and most titles of creative works ( 2607: 1345:Knowledge:Hatnote § Hatnote templates 1224:for the same title using apostrophes. 18853:. Available with its companion, the 18039: 18037: 17997:Knowledge:Naming conventions (flora) 17993:Knowledge:Naming conventions (fauna) 17985:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Trademarks 17943:Knowledge:Naming conventions (ships) 17778:– is a short primer on editing pages 16744:) may be misidentified as the Latin 16060:Avoid anachronism. An article about 14212:A player passing "Go" collects $ 200 12993: 12762:; or where the year is omitted, use 12539:inline dispute and cleanup templates 12368: 12274: 12056: 11970:Number (pound, hash) sign and numero 11584:is usually preferable to the slash: 10692:10:30 pm Tuesday – 1:25 am Wednesday 9664:) unless part of a larger compound ( 9310: 9273: 9244: 9211: 9144: 9111: 9061: 9026: 8995: 8915: 8702:) in a list of three or more items. 8618: 8585: 8532: 8476: 8445: 8389: 8350: 8307: 8258: 8116:) or three dots separated by spaces 7295: 7198:WP:Manual of Style § Titles of works 7197: 6910:, or (as in the example just given) 6795:template can be used for this; e.g. 6753:Knowledge:Naming conventions (flora) 6638:Do not use accent marks, backticks ( 6059:, and paragraph or stanza breaks by 5851:§ For a quotation within a quotation 5839:characterizing it in a biased manner 5551:Generally preserve bold and italics 5529: 5521:§ For a quotation within a quotation 5513: 5181:Brief quotations of copyrighted text 4996: 4772: 4708:WP:Manual of Style § Titles of works 4707: 4579:(just as they replace other disused 4411:, especially acronyms. For example, 4216:is a commonly used abbreviation for 3325:Knowledge:Naming conventions (flora) 3321:Knowledge:Naming conventions (fauna) 3319:for handling of first sentence. See 3285:Animals, plants, and other organisms 1794:What languages are spoken in Mexico? 1788:Not be phrased as a question, e.g., 1616:(above), and should be presented in 1232:, the rest of the MoS, particularly 1198:Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 31: 20526:List of all policies and guidelines 18950: 18835:(University of Chicago Press). The 18392:"Series title italicized" is using 15675:However, the region of Spain named 15354:For examples and finer points, see 15309:, not carelessly (with the risk of 14308:by asking and answering questions. 14304:Do not address the reader with the 14194:, which sets an inappropriate tone 13003:He is the current ambassador to ... 12785:For date formats in citations, see 11249:Category:Table tennis-related lists 11241:Category:Trans–New Guinea languages 11209:post–September 11 anti-war movement 10142:: The hyphen is represented by the 9980: 8580:Place quotation marks by following 7852:To reduce the size of a quotation: 7664:Proletarian Sports Society "Dynamo" 7170: 7048:was an American baseball player ... 6935:He announced, "The answer was 'Yes! 6927:He announced, "The answer was 'Yes! 5632: 4425:, but neither it nor the reduction 3858:The city has a population of 55,000 2800:, use lower case for words such as 2289:to prevent confusion, for example, 1731:Not contain template transclusions. 1713:Not contain citations or footnotes. 1613: 1370:Banner-type maintenance templates, 24: 20606: 20565:Summaries of values and principles 20406: 20244: 20007: 19833: 17966:Opening paragraph of biographies: 17707:Identifying and using style guides 16670: 16288:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Captions 16213:Avoid using images to display text 15906:Introduction to general relativity 15487:Terms with common usage in English 14596:By default, write articles in the 14297:explicit Knowledge self-references 14186:Avoid addressing the reader using 13791:For the apostrophe character, see 13588:are usually spaced on both sides: 13169:MOS:NUM § Uncertainty and rounding 12923:Decades are written in the format 12871:He was elected in the fall of 1992 12830:Abbreviations for months, such as 11838:trauma or smoke inhalation or both 11565:Must both be present? (Then write 10949:a male–female height ratio of 1.14 9670:The idea was clearly stated enough 9096:"I have studied it, you have not." 8013:https://example.com/foo.php?query= 7666:was established in Moscow in 1923. 7638:slang, which was prevalent at the 7578:Quotation marks and internal links 7561:Kiefer, Francine (May 29, 1998). " 7491:Quotation marks and external links 7192:WP:Manual of Style/Titles of works 6830:For a quotation within a quotation 6783:, loosely meaning 'public affair'. 6680:seen in edit window dropdowns are 5494:Normalize dashes and hyphens: see 5217:living or recently deceased people 5078:, so it should not be italicized.) 4995:Do not put quotations in italics. 4702:WP:Manual of Style/Titles of works 4442:New Zealand gross national product 4289:, except when quoting. Do not use 4241:by default when abbreviating, but 3831:the history of Stanford University 3317:Knowledge:Lead section § Organisms 2875:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Religion 2706:WP:Manual of Style/Titles of works 2044:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Spelling 906:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Contents 25: 20700: 18779:element may not always be italic. 18701:. No top icons are displayed, so 18592:Knowledge:Miscellany for deletion 18527:tag and the content preceding it. 18034: 17629:in Knowledge is indicated in the 17414:not be used to store article text 16771: 16455:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Linking 15214:two members of the Onassis family 14785:Knowledge:Gender-neutral language 14390:plural, not its original plural: 14237:a person's sense of being watched 14229:a sense that one is being watched 13262:Most currency symbols are placed 12172:in citations, or be spelt out as 11315:consistency with related articles 11202:aircraft from before World War II 10976:, an area encompassing two cities 10320:consistency with related articles 10080:be used as a point of line-wrap. 9962:4.9-mile (7.9 km) -long tributary 9543:is more frequently attested than 8929:consistency with related articles 8912:enclosed within quotation marks. 7542:Kiefer, Francine (May 29, 1998). 7512:Kiefer, Francine (May 29, 1998). 7217:WP:Manual of Style/Lists of works 7200:(which summarizes the key points) 6668:to quoted non-English text – see 5449:Unnecessary and may imply doubt: 4726:WP:Manual of Style/Lists of works 4710:(which summarizes the key points) 4541:In normal text and headings, use 4063:an early Local Area Network (LAN) 4009: 3808:Proper names versus generic terms 3647:The sun was over the mountain top 3421:), while cultivar groups do not ( 3102:, a system of political thought; 2933:); if unsure, check a dictionary. 2828:Directly before the person's name 2177:International Labour Organization 1664:Be unique within a page, so that 1228:Subject both to the above and to 981:fashion without prior consensus, 60:edit to this page should reflect 20475: 20472: 20403: 20220: 20167: 20164: 20097: 20094: 20050:Please do not bite the newcomers 19923: 19769: 19673: 19672: 18222:to the name of the article, and 18148:(in most cases), and entries in 17960:Specifically (for individuals): 17917:Generally (dedicated MOS page): 16883:maroon and alternative font face 16695:Obsolete elements and attributes 16131:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Images 15812: 15719: 15649:, and the alternative spellings 15452:. There are alternatives to the 14630:The Gordon Riots of 1780 were... 13792: 13661:are closed-up to their operand: 13149:Indicate uncertainties as e.g., 12544:When reference tags are used, a 11362: 11012:an Italian–Swiss border crossing 10793:separate or independent elements 10625:July 23, 1790 – December 1, 1791 9523:), or where a word is uncommon ( 9431: 9416: 9398: 9386: 9374: 6530:In the material below, the term 6473: 5955: 5351:), but if the text being quoted 4865:are the integers greater than 0. 4504:over the rendered text causes a 4494:|WHO|World Health Organization}} 3184:Draconian constitution of Athens 2814:De Gaulle was a French president 1273:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Layout 1233: 1148:The economy of the Second Empire 1076:For formatting guidance see the 35: 18792:"Hyphens, En Dashes, Em Dashes" 18784: 18743: 18719: 18676: 18646: 18633: 18600:Knowledge:Arbitration Committee 18576: 18559: 18512: 18458: 18413: 18403: 18386: 18363: 18354: 17836:User:Ohconfucius MOSDATE script 17631:International Phonetic Alphabet 16678:Other things being equal, keep 16376:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Lists 16354:Knowledge:Manual of Style/Lists 15786:§ National varieties of English 15730:titles of major published works 15440:template using the appropriate 14519:§ Opportunities for commonality 14515:§ National varieties of English 14255:Click here for more information 14246:may sometimes be used instead: 13530:is indicated by a superscript, 13393:(MeV), but were eventually 6MeV 13371:§ National varieties of English 13138:§ National varieties of English 13036:expressible in one or two words 12867:He was elected in November 1992 12554:standard appendices and footers 12270: 12115: 11927: 11917: 11913: 11903: 11893: 11591:An unspaced slash may be used: 11468: 11464: 11299:"Ain't No Cure for Love" – 6:17 11119:the Seeliger–Donker-Voet scheme 10370:template may be used for this: 9588:a government monitoring program 9584:a government-monitoring program 8748:Add or remove the serial comma. 8582:§ Punctuation inside or outside 8282:(when Janet has multiple sons) 8132:"Alpha, Bravo,{{nbsp}}... Zulu" 7213:the section you are reading now 6525: 6114:not supported in the material. 6049:Meant in croaking "Nevermore." 5829:if the quotation is an opinion 5591:indicates emphasis, use italic 4990: 4852: 4106:use apostrophes to form plurals 4024:Write first occurrences in full 3849:in the organization's acronym: 3098:) or has become a proper name ( 3048:the Magi, or the Three Wise Men 3010:start with lower-case letters ( 2850:). Royal styles take capitals ( 2495:For topics with strong ties to 2346:Strong national ties to a topic 1938: 1080:section, noting the following: 1029:§ National varieties of English 20650:Suggested stages of an article 18230:, so also check the article's 18192: 18155: 18015:This is a matter of policy at 17861:Community standards and advice 17074:(all equivalent). Markup: for 16947:to indent an entire block and 16740:(the upper-case form of Greek 15053:". Similarly, phrases such as 14477:are playing the Lakers tonight 14179:. For "A picture of you", see 12850:Avoid ambiguous references to 12692:(wherein the spaces should be 12603: 12178: 12159: 12155: 12091: 11713:Prefer the division operator ( 11619:, but see other techniques at 11586:the digital–analog distinction 11229:Turks and Caicos–based company 11192:former prime minister Thatcher 11110:the Seifert–van Kampen theorem 10923:the analog–digital distinction 10875:a six-to-two majority decision 10680:Christmas Day – New Year's Eve 10631:July 23, 1790–December 1, 1791 10043:Image filenames and redirects: 9950:a soundtrack album of four CDs 9446:In hyphenated personal names ( 8295:(when Janet has only one son) 7900:(This sentence is an example.) 7642:in England from about 1875.... 6738:Bob said: "Jim ate the apple." 6291:''Dynasty''{{'s}} first season 6112:lead the reader to conclusions 5956:indentation for other purposes 5692: 5192:can still violate copyright). 4148:). There are some exceptions: 4020:to apply also to initialisms. 3333:taxonomic ("scientific") names 3276:competed on the Spring Circuit 2887:Religions, sects, and churches 2515:Retaining the existing variety 2091:An article's date formatting ( 2002:template-structured glossaries 1509:Internal links organized into 1009:Knowledge talk:Manual of Style 1000:to avoid disputes over style. 13: 1: 20060:Responding to threats of harm 19802:Biographies of living persons 19478:References and external links 18892:(Modern Language Association) 18873:Garner's Modern English Usage 18325:Breeds guideline added per a 17955: 17485:Collapsed or auto-collapsing 14932: 14796:Knowledge:Writing about women 14104:found in scientific writing ( 13610:multiplication and division: 13416:Formatting of monetary values 13389:Energies were originally 2.3 12609:Supreme Leader of North Korea 12343:Consecutive punctuation marks 12289:§ Bulleted and numbered lists 12263: 12174: 11567:the parent and the instructor 11245:Category:Tennis-related lists 11131:(discovered by Hale and Bopp) 11114:the Alpher–Bethe–Gamow theory 10808:a New York–Los Angeles flight 10800:boyfriend–girlfriend problems 10229:, or enter them manually as: 9072:"Life is short, art is long." 8980:Help:List § Description lists 8792:– introduces ambiguity about 8364:), survived for a few months. 8180:Pause or suspension of speech 7867: 7830: 7814: 7798: 7568:The Christian Science Monitor 7549:The Christian Science Monitor 7519:The Christian Science Monitor 7302:Punctuation inside or outside 7063:Punctuation before quotations 6957:(a regular space is too much) 6453:, when indicated at all, use 5714:§ Consistency within articles 5332: 4341: 3327:for article title guidelines. 3232:start with a capital letter ( 3070:Spiritual or religious events 2844:Hirohito was Emperor of Japan 2649:throughout The United Kingdom 2645:throughout the United Kingdom 2612:§ Bulleted and numbered lists 2203:Opportunities for commonality 2016:National varieties of English 1236:, applies also to the title. 998:opportunities for commonality 658:References and external links 20632:Visual structure of articles 20127:Criteria for speedy deletion 19996:Paid-contribution disclosure 18918:to help reach a consensus. › 18868:(Council of Science Editors) 18796:www.chicagomanualofstyle.org 18175:) may have ambiguity issues. 17929:Diacritical marks in names: 17276:A line break may occur at a 15997:have major words capitalized 15096:It is important to note that 15045:. They are a subtle form of 14427:(and proper names of them), 13195:for the Australian dollar), 13063:MOS:NUM § Grouping of digits 12672:format is more appropriate. 12578:: Reference tags are placed 12529:. All reference tags should 11673:the NY 31 east / NY 370 exit 11660:A spaced slash may be used: 11571:the parent or the instructor 11348: 11336: 11064: 11034:an Indian-American scientist 10686:Christmas 2001 – Easter 2002 10534:Henry VIII reigned 1509–1547 10268:Knowledge:How to make dashes 10260:Do not use a double hyphen ( 9942:Multi-word hyphenated items: 9826:two- and three-digit numbers 9762:the gesture was well-meaning 9666:a slowly-but-surely strategy 8682:(sometimes also known as an 8380:) survived for a few months. 6769:'freebooter' is the root of 6686:units of angular measurement 5845:Quotations within quotations 5554: 5039:Effect on nearby punctuation 4508:of the long form to pop up. 4275:France and the United States 4130:Dr. Smith of 42 Drummond St. 3452:southwestern red-tailed hawk 3166:Alice in Wonderland syndrome 2848:Louis XVI was King of France 2777:Hymnus an den heiligen Geist 2747: 2551:. For the title policy, see 2075: 2072:), and occasionally grammar 1333:, most of the time with the 1144:Economy of the Second Empire 7: 19331:Specific naming conventions 18865:Scientific Style and Format 18832:The Chicago Manual of Style 18470:Clovis beat Portales, 35–12 18451:. For more information see 18428: 18308:are increasingly lower-case 17515:into the article prose, or 16967: 16907:hues) rather than glaring. 16795: 16769: 16530: 16514:italics in cross-references 16373: 16323:Bulleted and numbered lists 16057:be listed as alternatives. 16045: 16003: 15938: 15779:|de|italic=unset|Nürnberg}} 15703: 15457: 15353: 15141: 14789:Knowledge:Editors' pronouns 14601: 14195: 13836:Illinois's largest employer 13471:, Unicode character U+2212 13438:Common mathematical symbols 13165:{{val|1.534|0.35|e=23|u=m}} 13135: 12878:(for more information, see 12877: 12333: 11779: 11581: 11346: 11334: 11094: 11062: 10910:the Lincoln–Douglas debates 10804:the Paris–Montpellier route 10379: 10265: 10055:Michelson–Morley experiment 10049:Michelson-Morley experiment 10028: 10011:The History of Middle-earth 9966:4.9-mile (7.9 km) tributary 9782: 9780: 9770:the floor was well polished 9565:gas-phase reaction dynamics 8934:Except in technical usage ( 8913: 8616: 8093: 7878:, one could properly write 7865: 7379:Did Darla say, "Here I am?" 7370:Did Darla say, "Here I am"? 7203: 7050: 6409: 5992:are generally ignored; use 5966: 5830: 5711: 5700: 5690: 5552: 5495: 5296:"Ocyrhoe told him his fate" 5292:principle of minimal change 4916:level and below (italicize 4894: 4850: 4801: 4227:The Chicago Manual of Style 4155:for "Philosophiae Doctor"; 4152: 3968:), except in proper names ( 3434:vernacular ("common") names 3357:Erithacus rubecula superbus 2818:Louis XVI was a French king 2575:variety of English template 2539:§ Retaining existing styles 2332: 2115:Consistency within articles 2073: 1518:metadata, if needed, using 1478: 1428: 1342: 1282: 1239: 1026: 513:Specific naming conventions 10: 20705: 19010:Organizing by subject area 18818: 18641:Template:Navbox visibility 18522:can be inserted between a 18029:Simplified Manual of Style 17894: 17879: 17830:User:GregU's dashes script 17811:(or some alternatives, as 17619: 17558: 17551: 17544: 17526: 17453:mobile version of the site 17389: 17382: 17350: 16998: 16980: 16932: 16914: 16834: 16828: 16761: 16750: 16645: 16551: 16458: 16452: 16361: 16351: 16326: 16285: 16267: 16222: 16216: 16202: 16145:Knowledge:Picture tutorial 16141:Knowledge:Image use policy 16134: 16128: 16110: 16099: 15976: 15951: 15873: 15866: 15848: 15792:Other non-English concerns 15559: 15513: 15421: 15398: 15366: 15324: 15271: 15246: 15170: 15160: 15010: 14995: 14942: 14895: 14799: 14793: 14782: 14775: 14733: 14715: 14581: 14574: 14528: 14362: 14352: 14327: 14253:Do not bait links, e.g., " 14170: 14131: 14019: 14008: 13990: 13889: 13797: 13790: 13765: 13742: 13459: 13441: 13431:for angles and coordinates 13373:for spelling differences). 13285: 13179: 13026: 12971: 12965: 12892: 12842: 12823:For month and year, write 12815: 12743: 12657: 12648:§ Other uses for en dashes 12631: 12616:Punctuation after formulae 12492: 12439: 12346: 12299: 12225: 12218: 12019: 12012: 11973: 11826:trauma or smoke inhalation 11797: 11517: 11510: 11415: 11341:; conversely, it may also 11260: 11216:Trans–New Guinea languages 11188:ex–prime minister Thatcher 11153: 11016:an Italian-Swiss newspaper 10987: 10772: 10572:between 450 and 500 people 10554:Do not mix en dashes with 10514: 10507: 10468: 10404: 10382:§ Other uses for en dashes 10264:) to stand in for a dash. 10172: 10165: 10082: 9946:a four-CD soundtrack album 9834:sloping right- or leftward 9830:a ten-car or -truck convoy 9789: 9766:the child was well-behaved 9737:(actors without siblings). 9695:a kindly provided facility 9625:the handbag was light blue 9341: 9179: 9176:Semicolon before "however" 8977: 8945: 8883: 8865: 8670: 8631: 8561: 8505: 8420: 8214: 8096:§ Brackets and parentheses 8038: 7774:We journeyed on the Inter. 7731: 7699: 7544:"Clinton: The Early Years" 7514:"Clinton: The Early Years" 7350: 7344: 7305: 7187: 7066: 6965: 6833: 6703: 6545: 6523: 6491: 6341:Hebrew ayin or Arabic ʿayn 6247:), not curly apostrophes ( 6241:Use straight apostrophes ( 6214: 6196: 6178: 6121: 6065: 5969:§ Other uses for em dashes 5898: 5860: 5629:organism's scientific name 5466: 5395: 5377: 5246: 5235: 5228: 5147: 5140: 5133: 5127: 5042: 4988: 4963: 4944:three-part botanical names 4873: 4788: 4782: 4736: 4697: 4677:The meerkat is <em: --> 4666:for emphasis. This allows 4635: 4624: 4599: 4573:may be cautiously modified 4515: 4353: 4320: 4180: 4173: 4134:Dr Smith of 42 Drummond St 4027: 3989: 3983: 3913: 3907: 3811: 3774:variety of English adopted 3726:, or their related forms ( 3711: 3622: 3616: 3565:Berlin Short-faced Tumbler 3306: 3288: 3221: 2878: 2872: 2866: 2789: 2703: 2632: 2595: 2558:When an English variety's 2546: 2536: 2518: 2501:former British territories 2367: 2349: 2206: 2143: 2118: 2037: 2019: 1953:, or simply inserting the 1888: 1816: 1740: 1671: 1630: 1593: 1554: 1462:As explained in detail in 1270: 1252: 1098:Funding of UNESCO Projects 1094:Funding of UNESCO projects 1062: 1039: 965: 933: 896:for all English Knowledge 73: 20689:Knowledge Manual of Style 20659:Comprehensive style guide 20641:A checklist of components 20612: 20520: 20460: 20393: 20359: 20301: 20256: 20241: 20217: 20207: 20154: 20084: 20004: 19920: 19910: 19830: 19766: 19756: 19732: 19668: 19649: 19636:Wikimedia sister projects 19543: 19508: 19445: 19424: 19323: 19307: 19276: 19210: 19189: 19158: 19127: 19096: 19050: 18987: 18958: 18876:(Oxford University Press) 18798:. Chicago Manual of Style 18760:World Wide Web Consortium 18731:phabricator.wikimedia.org 17843:Other community standards 17655:pronunciation respellings 17305:named character reference 16579: 16572: 16084:was the president of the 16040: 15668:and the Swedish spelling 15657:redirect to that article. 15510:Spelling and romanization 15332:Specific guidelines apply 15135:For issues in the use of 15004:. For musical notes, see 14121:is constructed as follows 13983:, even for consistency.) 13928:ending with a pronounced 13820:my daughter's achievement 13354:out the first use (e.g., 13266:the number, and unspaced 13243:(€1.0M as of August 2009) 12750:Full dates are formatted 12597: 12436:Punctuation and footnotes 12094:1 in the UK albums chart. 11850:some or all of x, y, andz 11846:one or more of x, y, andz 11786:Help:Displaying a formula 11634:for further explanation); 11628:the 2009/2010 fiscal year 11436:typewriter approximations 11304:"Bird on the Wire" – 6:14 11198:pre–World War II aircraft 10711:wavelengths in the range 9948:may be easier to read as 9662:a wholly owned subsidiary 9637:the turkeys were hand-fed 9629:the woman is 34 years old 9552:To link related terms in 9547:in contemporary English). 9074:(two brief clauses in an 7994:markup can also be used: 7870:for an exceptional case.) 7388:Darla said, "Where am I?" 7255:(series title italicized) 6390:WP:TITLESPECIALCHARACTERS 5720:should not be reformatted 5538: 5033:sing thee to thy rest." . 5011:Italics within quotations 4422:Union Mondiale de Billard 4281:). Do not use the spaced 3951:Moreau's last words were 3944:Moreau's last words were 3728:We took the northern road 3659:The Moon orbits the Earth 3203:title of a published work 3096:capitalism versus Marxism 2776: 1839:on the same line must be 1545:Stand-alone list articles 930:Retaining existing styles 814:Wikimedia sister projects 18916:templates for discussion 18756:W3C Internationalization 18752:"Using b and i elements" 18750:Ishida, Richard (2015). 18605:statements of principles 18375:(slows the reader down). 18316:in typography always is. 17974:Names of organizations: 17758:Avoiding common mistakes 17701:Manual of Style Contents 17683:Manual of Style tutorial 17645:(general) for keys, and 17001:Help:Line-break handling 16554:Knowledge:External links 16086:Republic of South Africa 15806:§ Non-English quotations 15737:Les Liaisons dangereuses 15706:Knowledge:Article titles 15413:Help:Interlanguage links 15163:Knowledge:Please clarify 15151:§ Second-person pronouns 15047:Knowledge self-reference 15035:address readers directly 14663:A Prairie Home Companion 14656:A Prairie Home Companion 13860:for his conscience' sake 12889:Years and longer periods 12495:Knowledge:Citing sources 12327:§ Typographic conformity 12285:§ Formatting of captions 12183:in text. When using the 12151:volume two, number seven 12048:; do not use the symbol 11442:), for em or en dashes. 11377:, it is best to place a 11357:Other uses for em dashes 11321:Other uses for en dashes 11082:the protein-to-fat ratio 10813:iron–cobalt interactions 10134:Help:Line-break handling 9750:a very well managed firm 9691:a kindly-looking teacher 9672:can be disambiguated as 8771:To list several people: 7880:She "hate to do laundry" 7751:, and square brackets . 7696:Brackets and parentheses 7563:Clinton: The Early Years 7027:" is a nonsense poem ... 6670:§ Typographic conformity 6010: 5769:The animal is listed as 5425:imply something doubtful 5368:§ Typographic conformity 5300:"Ocyrhoe told his fate" 5201:the verifiability policy 4438:column header in a table 4413:World Union of Billiards 4390:Do not use the legalism 4379:|approx.|approximately}} 2764:Les Liaisons dangereuses 2604:Knowledge:Article titles 2404:Australian Defence Force 2326:Methodist connexionalism 2163:§ Typographic conformity 2056:) differ in vocabulary ( 1980:for further discussion. 1668:lead to the right place. 1481:Knowledge:Citing sources 1230:Knowledge:Article titles 1088:), but otherwise follow 1065:Knowledge:Article titles 20664:Writing better articles 20503:Licensing and copyright 19723:policies and guidelines 18903: 18859:New Oxford Style Manual 18582:See the near-unanimous 18419:Specifically, compound 18168:Piracy in the Caribbean 16977:Controlling line breaks 16608:external link templates 16606:Where appropriate, use 16064:should say he lived in 15687:in Catalan is given as 15092:It should be noted that 14891:Manned Maneuvering Unit 14827:gender-neutral language 14772:Gender-neutral language 14318:? Then who wrote Bacon? 14293:|(See ] for details.)}} 13878:), consider rewording ( 13862:). If a name ending in 13565:or the double asterisk 13400:§ En dashes: other uses 13320:7 miles (11 km) by road 12595:: Kim Jong-un (Korean: 12211:, at first occurrence. 11727:or slash is preferred: 11710:) in place of a slash. 11686:x&nbsp;/&nbsp;y 11140:Lennard-Jones potential 10898:the Uganda–Tanzania War 10877:, not with the awkward 10543:, or templates such as 10286:, do not use a hyphen ( 9775:In some cases, such as 9645:native Hawaiian species 9641:Hawaiian-native species 8098:, and the points below) 6765: 6118:Non-English quotations 6096:news and magazine style 5613:the guidance for titles 5085:What are we to make of 5069:What are we to make of 4804:Use–mention distinction 4467:HTML tags and templates 4116:Punctuation and spacing 3802:§ En dashes: other uses 3663:Io is a moon of Jupiter 3605:should all redirect to 3190:a platonic relationship 2509:a different orthography 2497:Commonwealth of Nations 1949:The advantage of using 1431:Knowledge:Summary style 1017:unchallengeable primacy 20668:A collection of advice 18568: 18198:A comment outside the 16864:Choose colors such as 16675: 16589:These will appear as: 16505:Initial capitalization 16474:the tallest people on 16297:Formatting of captions 16029: 15820:§ Quotation characters 15756: 15736: 15697:small group of editors 15683: 15677: 15566:Knowledge:Romanization 15218:The elements in stars 15025:Avoid phrases such as 14399: 14279:can be used for this: 14128:Second-person pronouns 13880:the teachings of Jesus 13844:Descartes's philosophy 13412:Unit names and symbols 13191:for the US dollar and 11762: 11056:Franco-British rivalry 11044:Franco–British rivalry 11029:French–British rivalry 11025:France–Britain rivalry 11020:Italian-speaking Swiss 10974:Minneapolis–Saint Paul 10919:diode–transistor logic 10639:14 May – 2 August 2011 10581:from 450 to 500 people 10576:between 450–500 people 9777:diode–transistor logic 9746:a well-meaning gesture 9733:(no adult actors) but 9683:A few words ending in 9658:a newly available home 9573:Middle-Eastern cuisine 9569:Middle Eastern cuisine 9405:Four-year old children 9393:Four year-old children 9381:Four-year-old children 9081:Ars longa, vita brevis 8824:To list three people: 7876:"I hate to do laundry" 7194:(overview and details) 7004:is a mystery novel ... 6812: 6779: 6052: 5536:The cynical response " 5463:Typographic conformity 5345:never bowdlerize words 5186:copyright infringement 4912:except viruses at the 4899:for more information.) 4704:(overview and details) 3956:) but not in English ( 3872:; an exception is the 3800:, use an en dash; see 3763:Southern United States 3577:American Quarter Horse 3500:livestock guardian dog 3125:or transcendent ideals 2763: 2739:Worth the Fighting For 1921:==Implications{{subst: 1909:links to the old title 1801:accessibility problems 1698:Not contain images or 1331:disambiguation hatnote 1202:) or an abbreviation ( 1191:Saint-Louis-du-Ha! Ha! 1154:) or title of a work ( 20498:Friendly space policy 20288:Broad-concept article 19797:What Knowledge is not 19792:Neutral point of view 19268:Writing about fiction 18900:by Strunk & White 18897:The Elements of Style 18846:Oxford Guide to Style 18232:Special:WhatLinksHere 17517:splitting the article 17400:, and templates like 16751:Further information: 16730:HTML character entity 16691:Help:HTML in wikitext 16674: 16631:not a link repository 16362:Further information: 15908:) may be a solution. 15570:Category:Romanization 15296:neutral point of view 14623:Earth: Final Conflict 14093:have come down to us. 14016:First-person pronouns 13402:, and MOS:NUM, at §§ 13211:United States dollars 12934:Years are denoted by 12507:) are used to create 12208:{{abbr|Nos.|Numbers}} 12032:symbol (known as the 11763: 11575:the parent-instructor 11311:the existing practice 11200:(consider recasting: 11190:(consider recasting: 11078:the protein/fat ratio 11074:the protein–fat ratio 10998:MOS:DUALNATIONALITIES 10888:a 50–50 joint venture 10883:a 17–22 majority vote 10871:a 22–17 majority vote 10867:a 12–0 perfect season 10698:6:00 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. 10667:February–October 2009 10316:the existing practice 10310:. Similarly, provide 9973:points of the compass 9956:might be possible as 9531:) or may be misread ( 8925:the existing practice 6593:quotation marks, not 6169:Knowledge:Translation 6044: 5958:is done differently. 5771:critically endangered 5718:Numbers also usually 5485:A quotation is not a 5439:, might be inferred. 5207:be accompanied by an 5128:Further information: 4960:Quotations in italics 4381:at first occurrence: 4348:Avoid unwarranted use 3837:). Do not capitalize 3798:east–west orientation 3086:an exodus of refugees 2873:Further information: 2659:The Lord of the Rings 2388:South African English 2146:Knowledge:Consistency 1984:Heading-like material 1302:Certain standardized 1142:) as the first word ( 919:without good reason. 917:should not be changed 441:Writing about fiction 146:Organizing by subject 100:Manual of Style (MoS) 54:occasional exceptions 20065:Talk page guidelines 20025:Conflict of interest 19966:Ownership of content 19811:Copyright violations 19787:No original research 19611:Talk page guidelines 19299:Stringed instruments 19005:Disambiguation pages 18889:The MLA Style Manual 18821:List of style guides 18698:wgMFRemovableClasses 18215:this advanced search 18098:2017 ArbCom decision 17715:– resisting MOSbloat 17689:Manual of Style quiz 16736:is explicit whereas 15920:write one level down 15000:. For hatnotes, see 14923:Contested vocabulary 14079:, or similar words: 13977:St Thomas's Hospital 13316:10 kilograms (22 lb) 13282:Units of measurement 13094:{{val|5.8|e=7|u=kg}} 12215:Terminal punctuation 12190:{{abbr|Vol.|Volume}} 11731: 11092:a three-to-one ratio 10914:a carbon–carbon bond 10906:the east–west runway 10902:the Roman–Syrian War 10847:red–green colorblind 10645:14 May–2 August 2011 9977:southwest/south-west 9615:she is a 34-year-old 9601:a light-blue handbag 8806:To list two people: 8757:To list two people: 8706:ham, chips, and eggs 8255:parenthetical phrase 8195:With square brackets 7905:Brackets and linking 7860:. When an ellipsis ( 7847:She attended school 7674:President Suharto's 7640:University of Oxford 7590:Play it, Sam. Play " 6542:Quotation characters 5977:quote without source 5631:, and to indicate a 5203:, direct quotations 5136:Knowledge:Quotations 5119:are not italicized.) 4830:She sat on the chair 4800:a word or character 3845:is represented by a 3794:north–south dialogue 3761:as someone from the 3571:Norwegian Forest Cat 3311:; on italicization, 2662:– but be aware that 2653:he visited The Hague 2564:strong national ties 2505:Commonwealth English 2499:countries and other 2434:Great Fire of London 2012:element, as needed. 1363:Use Canadian English 1249:Section organization 1023:in the discussion.) 990:consistently applied 794:Talk page guidelines 469:Stringed instruments 141:Disambiguation pages 20646:Article development 20637:The perfect article 20619:Starting an article 19961:No personal attacks 19883:Don't create hoaxes 19416:Trinidad and Tobago 19346:France (and French) 19341:China (and Chinese) 18857:, in one volume as 18286:Parkinson's disease 17732:Article development 16805:Specify font sizes 16487:Linking to sections 16171:should comply with 16049:, IPA: ) is the ... 16032:, IPA: ) is the ... 15900:Technical-statement 15834:interlinear glosses 15647:double acute accent 15290:, such as those on 15167:Knowledge:Vagueness 15113:. Use a heading of 15075:express a viewpoint 15039:unencyclopedic tone 14116:may be preferable ( 13981:St. Thomas Hospital 13968:St Thomas' Hospital 13919:my nieces' weddings 13571:scientific notation 13492:MULTIPLICATION SIGN 13080:Scientific notation 12912:before the digits ( 12202:{{abbr|No.|Number}} 12196:{{abbr|Iss.|Issue}} 11877: 11408:— Charlotte Brontë 11294:"The Future" – 7:21 11007:modify the second. 10842:a singer-songwriter 10838:a singer–songwriter 10830:, so use a hyphen: 10673:1492 – 7 April 1556 10585:from 450–500 people 10168:Knowledge:Dashboard 10066:non-breaking hyphen 9992:Mediterranean-style 9960:, and the ungainly 9932:12&nbsp;h shift 9709:) are not standard 9605:a 34-year-old woman 9580:short-story writers 9471:ultra-nationalistic 8712:ham, chips and eggs 7829:Nikifor Grigoriev ( 7813:Nikifor Grigoriev ( 7797:Nikifor Grigoriev ( 7607:Play it, Sam. Play 6859:Use single quotes: 6436:ejective consonants 6434:For languages with 5990:<blockquote: --> 5542:" was all he wrote. 5298:might be quoted as 5286:Quotations must be 5134:For the essay, see 4910:all other organisms 4828:The preposition in 4255:the U.S. and the UK 3751:Southern California 3736:Great Western Drive 3547:Standardized breeds 3470:fair-maid-of-France 3264:the winter solstice 3258:are in lower case ( 2992:saints and prophets 2668:Homer composed the 2454:Muhammad Ali Jinnah 2418:New Zealand English 2080:. Articles such as 1624:), not title case ( 1205:Inverness City F.C. 1096:), not title case ( 983:is never acceptable 598:Trinidad and Tobago 533:France (and French) 523:China (and Chinese) 20556:List of guidelines 20377:Template namespace 20055:Courtesy vanishing 20030:Disruptive editing 19976:Dispute resolution 19616:Template namespace 18667:en.m.wikipedia.org 18489:should be done as 17855:List of guidelines 17523:Invisible comments 17016:non-breaking space 16955:to indent inline. 16809:(for example with 16676: 16642:Keep markup simple 16564:==External links== 16423:sentence fragments 16417:complete sentences 16307:sentence fragments 15948:Geographical items 15869:Knowledge:Glossary 15845:Technical language 15769:template with the 15704:(Relevant policy: 15645:is spelt with the 15608:Aleksandr Tymoczko 15588:Chinese characters 15363:Non-English terms 15225: 15222:hydrogen, helium, 15221: 15213: 15209: 14696: 14692: 13924:For a plural noun 13856:for goodness' sake 13824:my niece's wedding 13704:are italicized in 13539:''n''</sup: --> 13423:non-breaking space 13171:for other formats. 13130:(with a space) or 13111:for similar words. 12944:non-breaking space 12938:or, equivalently, 12859:the autumn harvest 12523:citation footnotes 12281:Sentence fragments 12090:Her album reached 11875: 11758: 11757: 11251:both use hyphens. 10980:John Lennard-Jones 10312:category redirects 10227:CharInsert toolbar 10005:The Out-of-Towners 9841:non-breaking space 9554:compound modifiers 9467:pseudo-Apollodorus 9448:John Lennard-Jones 7856:may be reduced to 7096:the non-quotation 6749:'Golden Delicious' 6438:and the like, use 6262:Templates such as 5627:template), for an 5455:Should be quoted: 5293: 5190:close paraphrasing 5099:A Fringe of Leaves 4870:Non-English words 4303:ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 3755:the Western Desert 3718:Do not capitalize 3602:Pygoscelis adeliae 3559:Russian White goat 3458:Przewalski's horse 3424:Cynara cardunculus 3242:the Fourth of July 3209:The China Syndrome 3199:is not capitalized 3116:transubstantiation 3036:fictional universe 2746:should also be in 2626:Capitalization of 2608:§ Section headings 2577:on its talk page. 2408:Australian English 2394:American Civil War 2093:September 20, 2024 1827:MOS:SECTIONCOMMENT 1806:Not be wrapped in 1773:Smith's early life 1682:MOS:NOSECTIONLINKS 1511:navigational boxes 1157:A Clockwork Orange 1107:To italicize, add 799:Template namespace 743:Related guidelines 20676: 20675: 20574: 20573: 20516: 20515: 20456: 20455: 20419:Project namespace 20389: 20388: 20385: 20384: 20326:Dates and numbers 20293:Understandability 20203: 20202: 20150: 20149: 20142:Revision deletion 20115:Proposed deletion 20080: 20079: 20045:Gaming the system 20020:Assume good faith 19906: 19905: 19688: 19687: 19626:Understandability 19488:Structure drawing 19437:Latter Day Saints 19238:Lyrics and poetry 19181:Stand-alone lists 19068:Dates and numbers 18771:the content of a 18328:December 2018 RfC 17738:Basic copyediting 17726:Annotated article 17596:MOS:RENAMESECTION 16972:for alternatives. 16853:Do not use color 16758:Formatting issues 15584:Cyrillic alphabet 15442:ISO language code 15223: 15219: 15211: 15207: 15117:and text such as 15002:Knowledge:Hatnote 14863:crewed spacecraft 14851:human spaceflight 14839:The Ascent of Man 14694: 14690: 14681:was a mobile game 14089:Only portions of 13971:should therefore 13876:Jesus's teachings 13840:the US's partners 13832:the boss's office 13739:Grammar and usage 13558:, and either the 13538:''a''<sup: --> 13474: 13391:megaelectronvolts 13309:22 pounds (10 kg) 13020: 13019: 12778:The dates in the 12527:explanatory notes 12433: 12432: 12275:§ Quotation marks 12143: 12142: 11967: 11966: 11755: 11507:Slashes (strokes) 11223:post–Hartree–Fock 10832:an iron-roof shed 10820:an iron–roof shed 10590:from 1961 to 1964 10278:In article titles 9938: 9937: 9879:9&nbsp;mm gap 9735:only-child actors 9731:only child actors 9519:) or are vowels ( 9438:A man-eating fish 9335: 9334: 9298: 9297: 9269: 9268: 9236: 9235: 9173: 9172: 9140: 9139: 9106: 9105: 9053: 9052: 9022: 9021: 8916:§ Quotation marks 8714:– no serial comma 8619:§ Quotation marks 8612: 8611: 8559: 8558: 8503: 8502: 8472: 8471: 8418: 8417: 8385: 8384: 8346: 8345: 8299: 8298: 8140:. ? ! : ; , ) ] } 8023:, rather than ... 7984: 7983: 7978:On the first day 7965:On the first day 7650:A Cockney accent 7609:"As Time Goes By" 7359:logical quotation 6777:comes from Latin 6693:should be changed 6449:For the Cyrillic 6259:) as apostrophes. 6199:description lists 5617:non-English terms 5514:§ Quotation marks 5291: 5031:flights of angels 4796:Use italics when 4668:user style sheets 4559:January 1 & 2 4486:WHO</abbr: --> 4409:new abbreviations 4311:IOC country codes 4279:France and the US 3949:is preferable to 3876:, referred to as 3688:). Words such as 3464:California condor 3351:Berberis darwinii 3178:Platonic idealism 3151:are capitalized ( 2956:the Supreme Being 2907:the Bhagavad Gita 2750:, or enclosed in 2729:An Eye for an Eye 2682:institution names 2643:in mid-sentence: 2488:Hong Kong English 2458:Pakistani English 2257:is preferable to 2097:20 September 2024 1998:description lists 1990:headers of tables 1925:|Consequences}}== 1899:MOS:SECTIONANCHOR 1875:==Implications== 1837:invisible comment 1522:Authority control 1516:Authority control 1422:table of contents 1376:Cleanup templates 1322:Short description 1316:short description 878: 877: 804:Understandability 734: 733: 668:Structure drawing 623:Latter Day Saints 476: 475: 411:Lyrics and poetry 333:Stand-alone lists 208:Dates and numbers 94: 93: 16:(Redirected from 20696: 20601: 20594: 20587: 20578: 20577: 20551: 20550: 20541:List of policies 20536: 20535: 20493:List of policies 20480: 20479: 20478: 20470: 20469: 20466: 20463: 20411: 20410: 20409: 20401: 20400: 20397: 20394:Project content 20254: 20253: 20249: 20248: 20247: 20225: 20224: 20223: 20215: 20214: 20211: 20172: 20171: 20170: 20162: 20161: 20158: 20102: 20101: 20100: 20092: 20091: 20088: 20012: 20011: 20010: 19991:Child protection 19986:No legal threats 19956:Ignore all rules 19928: 19927: 19926: 19918: 19917: 19914: 19861:Reliable sources 19838: 19837: 19836: 19774: 19773: 19772: 19764: 19763: 19760: 19745:Ignore all rules 19727: 19715: 19708: 19701: 19692: 19691: 19676: 19675: 19662: 19586:Military history 19495:Computer science 19468:Compound classes 19315:Military history 18945: 18938: 18931: 18922: 18921: 18851:New Hart's Rules 18808: 18807: 18805: 18803: 18788: 18782: 18781: 18778: 18774: 18768: 18766: 18747: 18741: 18740: 18738: 18737: 18723: 18706: 18704: 18700: 18694: 18690: 18686: 18680: 18674: 18668: 18664: 18663:en.wikipedia.org 18650: 18644: 18637: 18631: 18616: 18610: 18602:'s standardized 18580: 18574: 18572: 18567:Munich (German: 18563: 18557: 18555: 18551: 18537: 18528: 18526: 18525:...</ref: --> 18516: 18510: 18508: 18504: 18500: 18499: 18493: 18483: 18477: 18475: 18471: 18467: 18462: 18456: 18441: 18435: 18434: 18417: 18411: 18407: 18401: 18390: 18384: 18380: 18374: 18367: 18361: 18358: 18352: 18330: 18323: 18317: 18314: 18305: 18299: 18293: 18287: 18282: 18276: 18270: 18254: 18235: 18225: 18221: 18217: 18210: 18204: 18201: 18196: 18190: 18187: 18176: 18174: 18173:Caribbean piracy 18169: 18164: 18161:Phrases such as 18159: 18153: 18122: 18109: 18094: 18088: 18070: 18064: 18041: 18032: 18021:MoS detail pages 18013: 17907: 17849:List of policies 17803:– proper use of 17652: 17639:Help:IPA/English 17604: 17599: 17592: 17585: 17581: 17539: 17480:Google Web Light 17469: 17465: 17461: 17407: 17377: 17370: 17363: 17342: 17341: 17336: 17335: 17330: 17322: 17314: 17310: 17299: 17291: 17283: 17271: 17269: 17263: 17253: 17251: 17245: 17238: 17236: 17230: 17223: 17221: 17215: 17208: 17206: 17200: 17193: 17191: 17185: 17178: 17169: 17167: 17161: 17154: 17152: 17146: 17139: 17137: 17131: 17124: 17122: 17116: 17109: 17107: 17101: 17087: 17079: 17078: 17073: 17065: 17057: 17046: 17044: 17038: 17030: 17026: 16993: 16973: 16964:description list 16961: 16954: 16946: 16927: 16890: 16884: 16874: 16868: 16847: 16820: 16812: 16797: 16775: 16747: 16743: 16739: 16735: 16720: 16714: 16706: 16700: 16665: 16658: 16625: 16617: 16614:Official website 16583: 16582: 16576: 16575: 16565: 16538: 16536: 16496: 16492: 16478: 16383: 16346: 16344:MOS:LISTNUMBERED 16339: 16280: 16235: 16233:MOS:TEXTASIMAGES 16205:Knowledge:Videos 16189: 16159:sandwiching text 16153: 16123: 16048: 16043: 16042: 16009: 15971: 15964: 15944: 15929: 15903: 15895: 15861: 15780: 15772: 15768: 15760: 15740: 15739: 15716:reliable sources 15713: 15686: 15680: 15613: 15609: 15605: 15601: 15554: 15547: 15545:MOS:ROMANISATION 15540: 15538:MOS:ROMANIZATION 15533: 15526: 15505: 15501: 15497: 15478: 15470: 15462: 15455: 15451: 15439: 15393: 15386: 15379: 15359: 15288:content policies 15266: 15259: 15226: 15215: 15183: 15148: 15146: 15137:cross-references 15132: 15129:active listening 15124: 15121:active listening 15116: 15115:Active listening 15105: 15101: 15097: 15093: 15089: 15085: 15072: 15068: 15064: 15060: 15056: 15049:, "breaking the 15041:and lean toward 15032: 15028: 14990: 14983: 14976: 14969: 14962: 14955: 14908: 14892: 14888: 14884: 14880: 14876: 14872: 14868: 14864: 14860: 14859:uncrewed mission 14856: 14852: 14845: 14840: 14819: 14812: 14767: 14763: 14759: 14755: 14749: 14728: 14726:MOS:CONTRACTIONS 14698: 14682: 14675: 14666: 14665:was a radio show 14659: 14651: 14645: 14641: 14636: 14631: 14626: 14618: 14607: 14569: 14562: 14555: 14548: 14541: 14512: 14500: 14489: 14485: 14478: 14421:collective nouns 14415: 14408: 14404: 14402: 14393: 14347: 14340: 14319: 14294: 14286: 14278: 14260: 14256: 14249: 14238: 14230: 14217: 14213: 14209: 14201: 14165: 14158: 14151: 14144: 14122: 14120: 14111: 14109: 14094: 14082: 14053: 14046: 14039: 14032: 14003: 13982: 13978: 13970: 13955: 13951: 13947: 13943: 13939: 13920: 13916: 13902: 13881: 13877: 13861: 13857: 13849: 13848:Verreaux's eagle 13845: 13841: 13837: 13833: 13829: 13825: 13821: 13785: 13778: 13755: 13733: 13725: 13715: 13690: 13679: 13675: 13671: 13667: 13651: 13647: 13643: 13639: 13632: 13628: 13624: 13617: 13613: 13606: 13602: 13598: 13594: 13582:binary operators 13568: 13564: 13557: 13550: 13540: 13535: 13523: 13517: 13513: 13509: 13505: 13502: 13499: 13498: 13493: 13490: 13487: 13486: 13478: 13472: 13470: 13454: 13428: 13398:For ranges, see 13394: 13383: 13379: 13378:metre per second 13365: 13361: 13357: 13342: 13334: 13330: 13321: 13317: 13310: 13277: 13275: 13271: 13258: 13254: 13244: 13232: 13228: 13224: 13205: 13194: 13190: 13166: 13162: 13161: 13159: 13155: 13145: 13141: 13133: 13129: 13125: 13121: 13117: 13106: 13102: 13095: 13091: 13090: 13088: 13060: 13056: 13052: 13041: 13016: 13004: 12994: 12990: 12949: 12930: 12926: 12919: 12915: 12883: 12872: 12868: 12864: 12860: 12833: 12827:, with no comma. 12826: 12800: 12799: 12773: 12772: 12767: 12766: 12761: 12760: 12755: 12754: 12734: 12731:begins the day; 12730: 12726: 12722: 12711: 12707: 12703: 12699: 12691: 12687: 12683: 12679: 12638:Dates should be 12606: 12605: 12600: 12599: 12565:Flightless birds 12506: 12505:...</ref: --> 12487: 12480: 12473: 12466: 12459: 12452: 12429: 12417: 12405: 12392: 12379: 12369: 12359: 12338: 12336:Sentence spacing 12319: 12312: 12252: 12245: 12238: 12210: 12209: 12204: 12203: 12198: 12197: 12192: 12191: 12182: 12180: 12176: 12171: 12163: 12161: 12157: 12152: 12148: 12139: 12119: 12117: 12095: 12093: 12079: 12067: 12057: 12052: 12047: 12043: 12039: 12030: 12026:Avoid using the 12007: 12000: 11993: 11986: 11960: 11950: 11940: 11929: 11919: 11915: 11905: 11895: 11878: 11874: 11851: 11847: 11843: 11839: 11827: 11823: 11819: 11810: 11789: 11778: 11767: 11765: 11764: 11759: 11756: 11754: 11746: 11745: 11736: 11722: 11721: 11716: 11709: 11698: 11692: 11688: 11687: 11682: 11674: 11667: 11651: 11647: 11640: 11629: 11618: 11611: 11610: 11587: 11583: 11576: 11572: 11568: 11564: 11557: 11544: 11537: 11530: 11502: 11499: 11496: 11495: 11490: 11486: 11483: 11480: 11479: 11474: 11470: 11466: 11462: 11457: 11453: 11450: 11449: 11441: 11428: 11404: 11403:Charlotte Brontë 11402: 11396: 11392: 11352: 11340: 11305: 11300: 11295: 11285: 11273: 11235: 11230: 11225: 11218: 11211: 11203: 11199: 11193: 11189: 11180: 11173: 11166: 11141: 11130: 11126: 11120: 11115: 11111: 11100: 11093: 11089: 11083: 11079: 11075: 11068: 11057: 11045: 11039: 11035: 11030: 11026: 11021: 11017: 11013: 11000: 10981: 10975: 10971: 10961: 10950: 10946: 10941: 10937: 10932: 10928: 10927:push–pull output 10924: 10920: 10915: 10911: 10907: 10903: 10899: 10893: 10889: 10884: 10880: 10876: 10872: 10868: 10864: 10859: 10858:blue-green algae 10855: 10854:blue–green algae 10848: 10843: 10839: 10833: 10821: 10814: 10809: 10805: 10801: 10785: 10740: 10736: 10732: 10722: 10721: 10715: 10714: 10706: 10705: 10700: 10699: 10694: 10693: 10688: 10687: 10682: 10681: 10675: 10674: 10669: 10668: 10655: 10654: 10647: 10646: 10641: 10640: 10633: 10632: 10627: 10626: 10618: 10612: 10604: 10600: 10595: 10591: 10586: 10582: 10577: 10573: 10568: 10550: 10535: 10531: 10527: 10502: 10495: 10488: 10481: 10453: 10447: 10441: 10436: 10424: 10422:MOS:NOTRIPLEDASH 10417: 10415:MOS:SPARETHEDASH 10399: 10385: 10375: 10369: 10359: 10345: 10300:does not modify 10289: 10271: 10263: 10256: 10248: 10239: 10235: 10224: 10214: 10199: 10192: 10185: 10154: 10148: 10130: 10102: 10095: 10075: 10057: 10051: 10038: 10034: 10030: 10020: 10013: 10007: 9997: 9993: 9989: 9981:§ Compass points 9967: 9963: 9959: 9955: 9951: 9947: 9933: 9929: 9917: 9905: 9904:9-millimetre gap 9893: 9892:9 millimetre gap 9880: 9876: 9864: 9854: 9853: 9846: 9835: 9831: 9827: 9817:suspended hyphen 9809: 9802: 9786: 9778: 9771: 9767: 9763: 9751: 9747: 9736: 9732: 9728: 9724: 9719: 9713: 9708: 9704: 9700: 9696: 9692: 9687: 9679: 9675: 9671: 9667: 9663: 9659: 9654: 9646: 9642: 9638: 9634: 9633:hand-fed turkeys 9630: 9626: 9616: 9606: 9602: 9589: 9585: 9582:are quite tall; 9581: 9574: 9570: 9566: 9562: 9546: 9542: 9538: 9534: 9530: 9526: 9522: 9518: 9514: 9510: 9506: 9491: 9483: 9472: 9468: 9464: 9463:quasi-scientific 9453: 9449: 9435: 9426: 9420: 9402: 9390: 9378: 9366: 9354: 9331: 9318: 9311: 9294: 9281: 9274: 9265: 9252: 9245: 9232: 9219: 9212: 9192: 9169: 9156: 9145: 9136: 9123: 9112: 9097: 9073: 9062: 9049: 9037: 9027: 9018: 9006: 8996: 8992: 8972: 8965: 8958: 8937: 8919: 8905: 8898: 8886:Help:Colon trick 8878: 8852: 8848: 8837: 8827: 8819: 8809: 8791: 8782: 8776: 8766: 8760: 8740: 8734: 8725: 8713: 8707: 8665: 8658: 8651: 8644: 8622: 8608: 8596: 8586: 8574: 8555: 8543: 8533: 8518: 8499: 8487: 8477: 8468: 8456: 8446: 8433: 8414: 8401: 8390: 8381: 8365: 8351: 8342: 8330: 8318: 8308: 8294: 8281: 8269: 8259: 8234: 8227: 8205: 8192: 8188: 8182: 8181: 8169: 8168: 8156: 8155: 8149: 8148: 8141: 8135: 8134: 8133: 8125: 8123: 8122: 8115: 8114: 8109: 8108: 8099: 8072: 8065: 8058: 8051: 8030: 8026: 8022: 8020: 8016: 8003: 8002:</nowiki: --> 7998: 7997:</nowiki: --> 7993: 7973: 7960: 7944: 7943: 7924: 7923: 7916: 7915: 7901: 7895: 7881: 7877: 7871: 7863: 7859: 7855: 7848: 7837: 7835: 7832: 7821: 7819: 7816: 7805: 7803: 7800: 7780: 7775: 7770: 7765: 7757: 7756:(as shown here). 7746: 7726: 7719: 7712: 7691: 7679: 7667: 7655: 7643: 7616: 7612: 7599: 7595: 7572: 7553: 7534: 7528: 7524: 7523: 7486: 7478: 7470: 7462: 7449: 7444: 7433: 7428: 7406: 7401: 7389: 7380: 7371: 7339: 7332: 7325: 7318: 7277:Ancient writings 7269: 7184:Names and titles 7179: 7165: 7160: 7145: 7135: 7125: 7115: 7105: 7099: 7091: 7079: 7056: 7049: 7028: 7010:Quotation marks 7005: 7001:"A" Is for Alibi 6994:"A" Is for Alibi 6978: 6962:Article openings 6956: 6950: 6945: 6944: 6938: 6932: 6930: 6921: 6920: 6914: 6909: 6908: 6902: 6897: 6896: 6890: 6882: 6881: 6877: 6865: 6853: 6846: 6824: 6821: 6818: 6815: 6809: 6802: 6794: 6788: 6784: 6782: 6768: 6750: 6739: 6730: 6723: 6716: 6700:Double or single 6679: 6675: 6663: 6655: 6651: 6650: 6644: 6634: 6633: 6627: 6620: 6619: 6613: 6606: 6605: 6599: 6592: 6591: 6585: 6572: 6565: 6558: 6518: 6511: 6504: 6468: 6460: 6445: 6430: 6414: 6380: 6369: 6368: 6359: 6348: 6347: 6338: 6327: 6326: 6317: 6306: 6305: 6293: 6292: 6287: 6285: 6277: 6269: 6258: 6257: 6252: 6251: 6246: 6245: 6234: 6227: 6203:Help:Punctuation 6191: 6171:for assistance. 6165: 6141: 6139:MOS:QUOTEFOREIGN 6134: 6132:MOS:FOREIGNQUOTE 6085: 6078: 6062: 6058: 6053: 6037: 6033: 6030: 6026: 6023: 6020: 6017: 6014: 6007: 5999: 5991: 5987: 5980: 5972: 5964: 5953: 5946: 5935: 5918: 5911: 5895:Block quotations 5880: 5873: 5836: 5816: 5814: 5806: 5799: 5794: 5789: 5774: 5748: 5739: 5717: 5706: 5696: 5645: 5626: 5610: 5602: 5586: 5585: 5580: 5576: 5574: 5568: 5564: 5563: 5558: 5543: 5541: 5540: 5479: 5458: 5452: 5446: 5419: 5413: 5390: 5362: 5350: 5342: 5338: 5327: 5323: 5319: 5309: 5301: 5297: 5280: 5273: 5266: 5259: 5223:Original wording 5174: 5167: 5160: 5114: 5103:The Aunt's Story 5090: 5073: 5055: 5034: 5022: 4983: 4976: 4955: 4941: 4931: 4927: 4921: 4904:Scientific names 4900: 4888: 4866: 4856: 4840: 4836: 4825: 4818: 4814:is derived from 4807: 4791:WP:WORDISSUBJECT 4770: 4766: 4762: 4749: 4689: 4688: 4681: 4680: 4665: 4657: 4619: 4612: 4591: 4560: 4556: 4535: 4528: 4499: 4495: 4487: 4482: 4474: 4462: 4458: 4451: 4447: 4443: 4432: 4428: 4424: 4414: 4397: 4393: 4386: 4385: 4380: 4372: 4368: 4343: 4339: 4300: 4296: 4292: 4288: 4284: 4280: 4276: 4272: 4268: 4264: 4260: 4256: 4252: 4247: 4240: 4223: 4219: 4215: 4207: 4200: 4193: 4166: 4162: 4158: 4154: 4151: 4147: 4143: 4139: 4135: 4131: 4111: 4103: 4079: 4075: 4071: 4064: 4058: 4047: 4040: 3975: 3971: 3967: 3963: 3959: 3955: 3948: 3933: 3926: 3879: 3863: 3859: 3852: 3836: 3832: 3828: 3799: 3795: 3791: 3787: 3783: 3779: 3776:in the article. 3768: 3756: 3752: 3747:names of regions 3741: 3737: 3733: 3732:Great North Road 3729: 3703: 3699: 3687: 3683: 3679: 3675: 3671: 3664: 3660: 3656: 3652: 3648: 3613:Celestial bodies 3578: 3572: 3566: 3560: 3554: 3540: 3534: 3528: 3519: 3513: 3507: 3501: 3495: 3489: 3483: 3477: 3471: 3465: 3459: 3453: 3447: 3441: 3427: 3420: 3395: 3390:are italicized ( 3385: 3381: 3377: 3373: 3369: 3359: 3353: 3347: 3341: 3301: 3277: 3273: 3269: 3265: 3261: 3251: 3247: 3243: 3239: 3235: 3211: 3196: 3191: 3185: 3179: 3173: 3172:plaster of Paris 3167: 3161: 3160:De Morgan's laws 3155: 3142: 3138: 3134: 3130: 3117: 3113: 3109: 3105: 3101: 3097: 3087: 3083: 3079: 3075: 3065: 3061: 3060:several wise men 3057: 3053: 3049: 3045: 3041: 3032:J. R. R. Tolkien 3029: 3025: 3021: 3017: 3013: 3003: 3002:God and his will 2993: 2989: 2985: 2981: 2977: 2973: 2969: 2965: 2961: 2960:the Great Spirit 2957: 2953: 2949: 2945: 2932: 2928: 2924: 2920: 2919:the Granth Sahib 2916: 2912: 2908: 2896: 2892: 2857: 2853: 2849: 2845: 2841: 2837: 2833: 2823: 2819: 2815: 2786:Titles of people 2781: 2779: 2778: 2767: 2766: 2741: 2731: 2672: 2661: 2654: 2650: 2646: 2620:reliable sources 2587: 2560:consistent usage 2531: 2478:Canadian English 2448:Nigerian English 2398:American English 2362: 2342: 2315: 2311: 2310:alternate leaves 2307: 2303: 2299: 2292: 2261: 2255: 2249:American English 2246: 2238: 2233: 2219: 2193: 2189: 2185: 2178: 2174: 2138: 2131: 2098: 2094: 2079: 2050:American English 2032: 1975: 1974: 1969: 1960: 1956: 1952: 1951:{{subst:Anchor}} 1946: 1945: 1941: 1929: 1928: 1901: 1877: 1876: 1869: 1868: 1863: 1862: 1855: 1854: 1846: 1829: 1795: 1791: 1778: 1774: 1770: 1760: 1753: 1751:MOS:SECTIONSTYLE 1723: 1718:description list 1705:Not contain < 1684: 1643: 1627: 1623: 1588: 1581: 1574: 1567: 1551:Section headings 1525: 1484: 1458: 1446: 1434: 1408: 1400: 1385: 1366: 1358: 1348: 1340: 1325: 1288: 1265: 1245: 1216: 1207: 1201: 1193: 1184: 1180: 1164: 1158: 1153: 1149: 1145: 1118: 1114: 1099: 1095: 1087: 1052: 1032: 960: 953: 946: 870: 863: 856: 675:Computer science 648:Compound classes 493:Military history 385: 384: 349: 348: 115: 96: 95: 86: 39: 38: 32: 21: 20704: 20703: 20699: 20698: 20697: 20695: 20694: 20693: 20679: 20678: 20677: 20672: 20671: 20655:Manual of Style 20623:Getting started 20608: 20605: 20575: 20570: 20548: 20547: 20533: 20532: 20512: 20476: 20474: 20452: 20407: 20405: 20381: 20355: 20309:Manual of Style 20297: 20245: 20243: 20237: 20221: 20219: 20199: 20195:Page protection 20168: 20166: 20146: 20110:Deletion policy 20098: 20096: 20076: 20008: 20006: 20000: 19924: 19922: 19902: 19893:Patent nonsense 19888:Fringe theories 19834: 19832: 19826: 19770: 19768: 19752: 19728: 19719: 19689: 19684: 19664: 19663: 19658: 19645: 19539: 19504: 19441: 19420: 19319: 19303: 19272: 19218:Anime and manga 19206: 19185: 19154: 19150:Trivia sections 19123: 19109:Image placement 19092: 19088:Titles of works 19083:Text formatting 19046: 19037:Self-references 19017:Gender identity 18983: 18954: 18952:Manual of Style 18949: 18919: 18911:Manual of Style 18823: 18817: 18815:Further reading 18812: 18811: 18801: 18799: 18790: 18789: 18785: 18776: 18772: 18764: 18762: 18748: 18744: 18735: 18733: 18725: 18724: 18720: 18715: 18710: 18709: 18702: 18696: 18692: 18689:vertical-navbox 18688: 18684: 18681: 18677: 18666: 18662: 18651: 18647: 18638: 18634: 18617: 18613: 18607:on such matters 18581: 18577: 18566: 18564: 18560: 18553: 18549: 18538: 18531: 18523: 18517: 18513: 18506: 18502: 18497: 18491: 18490: 18484: 18480: 18473: 18469: 18465: 18463: 18459: 18442: 18438: 18418: 18414: 18408: 18404: 18391: 18387: 18378: 18372: 18368: 18364: 18359: 18355: 18326: 18324: 18320: 18312: 18303: 18297: 18291: 18285: 18280: 18277: 18273: 18262: 18255: 18238: 18223: 18219: 18213: 18211: 18207: 18199: 18197: 18193: 18188: 18179: 18172: 18167: 18162: 18160: 18156: 18128:for sentences, 18124:Knowledge uses 18123: 18112: 18095: 18091: 18071: 18067: 18042: 18035: 18014: 18010: 18005: 17911: 17910: 17903: 17899: 17893: 17885: 17878: 17845: 17826: 17750:Perfect article 17744:Better articles 17722: 17667: 17646: 17624: 17618: 17602: 17593: 17590: 17586:. For example: 17583: 17579: 17563: 17557: 17550: 17543: 17542: 17535: 17531: 17525: 17505:included at all 17472:Help:Collapsing 17467: 17463: 17459: 17434:image galleries 17401: 17398:scrolling lists 17394: 17388: 17385:WP:TALKOFFTOPIC 17381: 17380: 17373: 17366: 17359: 17355: 17349: 17339: 17338: 17333: 17332: 17324: 17316: 17312: 17308: 17293: 17285: 17281: 17267: 17261: 17259: 17256: 17249: 17243: 17241: 17234: 17228: 17226: 17219: 17213: 17211: 17204: 17198: 17196: 17189: 17183: 17181: 17177:|5° 24′ 21″ N}} 17172: 17165: 17159: 17157: 17150: 17144: 17142: 17135: 17129: 17127: 17120: 17114: 17112: 17105: 17099: 17097: 17081: 17076: 17075: 17067: 17059: 17051: 17042: 17036: 17034: 17028: 17024: 17007: 17005:Template:Spaces 16997: 16996: 16989: 16985: 16979: 16959: 16948: 16940: 16937: 16931: 16930: 16923: 16919: 16913: 16888: 16882: 16872: 16866: 16859:color blindness 16851: 16850: 16845:MOS:COLORCODING 16843: 16839: 16833: 16827: 16818: 16810: 16766: 16760: 16755: 16745: 16741: 16737: 16733: 16718: 16712: 16704: 16698: 16669: 16668: 16661: 16654: 16650: 16644: 16639: 16619: 16611: 16604: 16587: 16586: 16580: 16573: 16563: 16556: 16550: 16517: 16494: 16490: 16489:: A hash sign ( 16473: 16463: 16457: 16451: 16446: 16429:titles of works 16366: 16360: 16350: 16349: 16342: 16335: 16331: 16325: 16299: 16290: 16284: 16283: 16276: 16272: 16266: 16239: 16238: 16231: 16227: 16221: 16215: 16207: 16201: 16187: 16151: 16147: 16133: 16127: 16126: 16119: 16115: 16109: 16104: 16098: 15985: 15975: 15974: 15967: 15960: 15956: 15950: 15923: 15897: 15889: 15882: 15872: 15865: 15864: 15857: 15853: 15847: 15832:For linear and 15794: 15774: 15770: 15762: 15747: 15734: 15681:in Spanish and 15611: 15607: 15604:Chiang Kai-shek 15603: 15599: 15572: 15558: 15557: 15550: 15543: 15536: 15529: 15522: 15518: 15512: 15503: 15499: 15495: 15489: 15472: 15464: 15453: 15445: 15433: 15426: 15420: 15415: 15397: 15396: 15389: 15382: 15375: 15371: 15365: 15329: 15323: 15321:Gender identity 15280: 15270: 15269: 15262: 15255: 15251: 15245: 15217: 15206: 15187: 15186: 15179: 15175: 15169: 15159: 15140: 15126: 15123:, coined in ... 15118: 15114: 15103: 15099: 15095: 15091: 15087: 15083: 15070: 15066: 15062: 15058: 15054: 15030: 15026: 15023: 15009: 14994: 14993: 14986: 14979: 14972: 14965: 14958: 14951: 14947: 14941: 14925: 14912: 14911: 14904: 14900: 14890: 14886: 14882: 14878: 14874: 14870: 14866: 14862: 14858: 14854: 14850: 14843: 14838: 14829:– avoiding the 14823: 14822: 14815: 14808: 14804: 14798: 14792: 14781: 14774: 14765: 14761: 14757: 14751: 14745: 14738: 14732: 14731: 14724: 14720: 14714: 14709: 14688: 14677: 14670: 14661: 14654: 14649: 14643: 14639: 14634: 14629: 14621: 14616: 14594: 14580: 14573: 14572: 14565: 14558: 14551: 14544: 14537: 14533: 14527: 14510: 14491: 14487: 14483: 14472: 14410: 14406: 14395: 14391: 14368: 14361: 14359:Collective noun 14355:English plurals 14351: 14350: 14343: 14336: 14332: 14326: 14309: 14306:Socratic method 14291:Cross reference 14288: 14283:Cross reference 14280: 14275:Cross reference 14272: 14258: 14254: 14247: 14236: 14235:seems stilted: 14228: 14215: 14211: 14207: 14184: 14169: 14168: 14161: 14154: 14147: 14140: 14136: 14130: 14118: 14117: 14107: 14105: 14088: 14080: 14057: 14056: 14049: 14042: 14035: 14028: 14024: 14018: 14013: 14007: 14006: 13999: 13995: 13989: 13980: 13976: 13975:be rendered as 13966: 13963: 13953: 13949: 13946:mice's whiskers 13945: 13942:people's habits 13941: 13938:women's careers 13937: 13918: 13914: 13906: 13905: 13898: 13894: 13888: 13879: 13875: 13859: 13855: 13847: 13843: 13839: 13835: 13831: 13827: 13823: 13819: 13808: 13803: 13796: 13789: 13788: 13781: 13774: 13770: 13764: 13759: 13758: 13751: 13747: 13741: 13727: 13719: 13705: 13688: 13677: 13673: 13669: 13665: 13659:unary operators 13649: 13645: 13641: 13637: 13630: 13626: 13622: 13615: 13611: 13604: 13600: 13596: 13592: 13573:is replaced by 13566: 13562: 13555: 13548: 13537: 13531: 13519: 13515: 13511: 13507: 13503: 13500: 13496: 13495: 13491: 13488: 13484: 13483: 13476: 13468: 13464: 13458: 13457: 13450: 13446: 13440: 13426: 13425:. For example, 13388: 13381: 13377: 13364:degrees Celsius 13363: 13359: 13355: 13336: 13332: 13328: 13319: 13315: 13308: 13290: 13284: 13273: 13269: 13267: 13256: 13252:Nepalese rupees 13249: 13238: 13230: 13226: 13222: 13219:pounds sterling 13203: 13192: 13188: 13184: 13178: 13164: 13157: 13153: 13151: 13150: 13143: 13131: 13127: 13123: 13119: 13115: 13104: 13100: 13093: 13086: 13084: 13083: 13058: 13054: 13050: 13039: 13031: 13025: 13014: 13002: 12984: 12980: 12974:Knowledge:As of 12970: 12964: 12947: 12928: 12924: 12917: 12913: 12905: 12891: 12870: 12866: 12862: 12858: 12847: 12841: 12831: 12824: 12820: 12814: 12797: 12796: 12770: 12769: 12764: 12763: 12758: 12757: 12752: 12751: 12748: 12742: 12732: 12728: 12724: 12720: 12709: 12705: 12701: 12697: 12689: 12685: 12681: 12677: 12662: 12656: 12636: 12630: 12618: 12567:have a reduced 12503: 12497: 12491: 12490: 12483: 12476: 12469: 12462: 12455: 12448: 12444: 12438: 12427: 12415: 12403: 12390: 12377: 12363: 12362: 12357:MOS:CONSECUTIVE 12355: 12351: 12345: 12323: 12322: 12315: 12310:MOS:DOUBLESPACE 12308: 12304: 12298: 12256: 12255: 12248: 12243:MOS:EXCLAMATION 12241: 12234: 12230: 12224: 12217: 12207: 12206: 12201: 12200: 12195: 12194: 12189: 12188: 12173: 12169: 12154: 12150: 12146: 12129: 12105: 12089: 12077: 12065: 12054:. For example: 12050: 12045: 12041: 12037: 12028: 12024: 12018: 12011: 12010: 12003: 11996: 11989: 11982: 11978: 11972: 11958: 11948: 11937: 11858: 11849: 11845: 11841: 11837: 11825: 11824:, write simply 11821: 11817: 11814: 11813: 11806: 11802: 11796: 11776: 11772: 11769: 11747: 11741: 11737: 11735: 11732: 11729: 11728: 11719: 11718: 11714: 11707: 11702:Do not use the 11696: 11690: 11685: 11684: 11680: 11672: 11665: 11649: 11645: 11638: 11627: 11616: 11615:in a fraction ( 11603: 11585: 11574: 11570: 11566: 11562: 11555: 11548: 11547: 11540: 11533: 11526: 11522: 11516: 11509: 11500: 11497: 11493: 11492: 11488: 11484: 11481: 11477: 11476: 11472: 11460: 11455: 11451: 11447: 11446: 11439: 11432: 11431: 11424: 11420: 11414: 11400: 11394: 11386: 11385: 11367:block quotation 11359: 11323: 11303: 11298: 11293: 11283: 11277: 11276: 11269: 11265: 11259: 11233: 11228: 11221: 11214: 11207: 11201: 11197: 11191: 11187: 11184: 11183: 11176: 11169: 11162: 11158: 11152: 11139: 11128: 11125:Comet Hale–Bopp 11124: 11118: 11113: 11109: 11091: 11087: 11081: 11077: 11073: 11055: 11043: 11037: 11033: 11028: 11024: 11019: 11015: 11011: 11004: 11003: 10996: 10992: 10979: 10973: 10969: 10959: 10948: 10944: 10939: 10935: 10930: 10926: 10922: 10918: 10913: 10909: 10905: 10901: 10897: 10891: 10887: 10882: 10878: 10874: 10870: 10866: 10862: 10857: 10853: 10846: 10841: 10837: 10831: 10819: 10812: 10807: 10803: 10799: 10789: 10788: 10781: 10777: 10771: 10748: 10744: 10738: 10734: 10730: 10720:pages 5-7 – 5-9 10719: 10718: 10712: 10710: 10703: 10702: 10697: 10696: 10691: 10690: 10685: 10684: 10679: 10678: 10672: 10671: 10666: 10665: 10652: 10651: 10644: 10643: 10638: 10637: 10630: 10629: 10624: 10623: 10616: 10610: 10602: 10598: 10593: 10589: 10584: 10580: 10575: 10571: 10566: 10544: 10533: 10529: 10525: 10519: 10513: 10506: 10505: 10498: 10491: 10484: 10477: 10473: 10467: 10451: 10445: 10439: 10434: 10428: 10427: 10420: 10413: 10409: 10393: 10376: 10373: 10363: 10360: 10357: 10346: 10343: 10328: 10326:In running text 10287: 10280: 10261: 10250: 10242: 10237: 10233: 10222: 10212: 10203: 10202: 10195: 10188: 10181: 10177: 10171: 10164: 10150: 10143: 10124: 10121:very long words 10106: 10105: 10098: 10091: 10087: 10069: 10053: 10047: 10037:the suffix-less 10036: 10033:the prefix sub- 10032: 10018: 10009: 10003: 9995: 9991: 9987: 9965: 9961: 9957: 9953: 9949: 9945: 9939: 9931: 9927: 9915: 9903: 9891: 9878: 9874: 9862: 9844: 9833: 9829: 9825: 9820:(also called a 9813: 9812: 9805: 9798: 9794: 9776: 9769: 9765: 9761: 9749: 9748:; but normally 9745: 9734: 9730: 9726: 9722: 9717: 9711: 9706: 9702: 9698: 9694: 9690: 9685: 9677: 9673: 9669: 9665: 9661: 9657: 9652: 9644: 9640: 9636: 9632: 9628: 9624: 9614: 9604: 9600: 9587: 9583: 9579: 9572: 9568: 9564: 9561:ease-of-reading 9560: 9544: 9540: 9536: 9532: 9528: 9524: 9520: 9516: 9512: 9508: 9504: 9489: 9481: 9470: 9466: 9462: 9451: 9447: 9443: 9442: 9441: 9440: 9439: 9436: 9428: 9427: 9424: 9421: 9410: 9409: 9408: 9407: 9406: 9403: 9395: 9394: 9391: 9383: 9382: 9379: 9364: 9358: 9357: 9350: 9346: 9340: 9329: 9316: 9292: 9279: 9263: 9250: 9230: 9217: 9196: 9195: 9188: 9184: 9178: 9167: 9154: 9134: 9121: 9095: 9071: 9047: 9035: 9016: 9004: 8990: 8983: 8976: 8975: 8968: 8963:MOS:COMMASPLICE 8961: 8954: 8950: 8944: 8935: 8906: 8902: 8896: 8889: 8882: 8881: 8874: 8870: 8864: 8850: 8846: 8835: 8834:can be tricky; 8825: 8817: 8807: 8789: 8780: 8774: 8764: 8758: 8742: 8738: 8736: 8732: 8723: 8715: 8711: 8709: 8705: 8676: 8669: 8668: 8661: 8654: 8647: 8640: 8636: 8630: 8606: 8594: 8578: 8577: 8570: 8566: 8553: 8541: 8522: 8521: 8514: 8510: 8497: 8485: 8466: 8454: 8437: 8436: 8429: 8425: 8412: 8399: 8375: 8359: 8340: 8328: 8316: 8292: 8279: 8267: 8251:relative clause 8245:can bracket an 8238: 8237: 8230: 8223: 8219: 8213: 8199: 8190: 8186: 8179: 8178: 8166: 8165: 8153: 8152: 8146: 8145: 8139: 8131: 8130: 8129: 8120: 8119: 8117: 8112: 8111: 8106: 8105: 8076: 8075: 8068: 8061: 8054: 8047: 8043: 8037: 8028: 8024: 8018: 8014: 8012: 8001:<nowiki: --> 8000: 7996:<nowiki: --> 7995: 7987: 7972: 7959: 7941: 7940: 7921: 7920: 7907: 7899: 7896: 7893: 7879: 7875: 7861: 7857: 7853: 7846: 7833: 7828: 7817: 7812: 7801: 7796: 7778: 7773: 7768: 7763: 7755: 7747:, often called 7744: 7741: 7730: 7729: 7722: 7715: 7708: 7704: 7698: 7685: 7673: 7661: 7649: 7629: 7614: 7606: 7597: 7592:As Time Goes By 7589: 7580: 7560: 7541: 7532: 7526: 7511: 7510: 7493: 7484: 7476: 7468: 7460: 7447: 7442: 7431: 7426: 7404: 7399: 7387: 7378: 7369: 7355: 7349: 7343: 7342: 7335: 7328: 7321: 7314: 7310: 7304: 7292: 7286:Myths and epics 7263: 7258: 7226: 7186: 7177: 7163: 7158: 7143: 7133: 7123: 7113: 7103: 7097: 7089: 7083: 7082: 7075: 7071: 7065: 7036: 7022: 6998: 6982: 6981: 6974: 6970: 6964: 6954: 6948: 6942: 6936: 6934: 6928: 6926: 6918: 6912: 6911: 6906: 6900: 6899: 6894: 6888: 6887: 6879: 6875: 6873: 6863: 6857: 6856: 6849: 6842: 6838: 6832: 6822: 6819: 6816: 6803: 6796: 6792: 6786: 6762: 6747:Malus domestica 6745: 6740:). Exceptions: 6737: 6734: 6733: 6728:MOS:SIMPLEGLOSS 6726: 6719: 6712: 6708: 6702: 6677: 6673: 6672:). The symbols 6661: 6653: 6646: 6640: 6639: 6629: 6623: 6622: 6615: 6609: 6608: 6601: 6595: 6594: 6587: 6581: 6580: 6576: 6575: 6568: 6561: 6554: 6550: 6544: 6528: 6522: 6521: 6514: 6509:MOS:SPEECHMARKS 6507: 6500: 6496: 6490: 6488:Quotation marks 6462: 6454: 6439: 6424: 6402:Kealiʻi Reichel 6374: 6366: 6365: 6353: 6345: 6344: 6332: 6324: 6323: 6311: 6303: 6302: 6290: 6289: 6283: 6279: 6271: 6263: 6255: 6254: 6249: 6248: 6243: 6242: 6238: 6237: 6230: 6223: 6219: 6211: 6206: 6195: 6194: 6187: 6183: 6177: 6159: 6145: 6144: 6137: 6130: 6126: 6120: 6089: 6088: 6081: 6074: 6070: 6060: 6056: 6051: 6043: 6039: 6038: 6034: 6031: 6028: 6024: 6021: 6018: 6015: 6012: 6001: 5993: 5989: 5985: 5974: 5962: 5951: 5940: 5929: 5926:block quotation 5922: 5921: 5914: 5907: 5903: 5897: 5884: 5883: 5876: 5869: 5865: 5859: 5847: 5827:in article text 5823: 5812: 5810: 5804: 5797: 5792: 5787: 5782: 5768: 5746: 5737: 5639: 5620: 5604: 5596: 5583: 5582: 5578: 5572: 5570: 5566: 5561: 5560: 5535: 5483: 5482: 5475: 5471: 5465: 5456: 5450: 5444: 5417: 5411: 5404: 5394: 5393: 5386: 5382: 5376: 5356: 5348: 5340: 5336: 5325: 5321: 5313: 5303: 5299: 5295: 5284: 5283: 5276: 5269: 5262: 5255: 5251: 5245: 5234: 5225: 5213:reliable source 5209:inline citation 5178: 5177: 5170: 5163: 5156: 5152: 5146: 5139: 5132: 5126: 5111:The Tree of Man 5096: 5084: 5068: 5059: 5058: 5051: 5047: 5041: 5028: 5016: 5013: 4997:Quotation marks 4993: 4987: 4986: 4979: 4974:MOS:NOITALQUOTE 4972: 4968: 4962: 4947: 4933: 4929: 4923: 4917: 4906: 4882: 4878: 4872: 4863:natural numbers 4860: 4838: 4827: 4820: 4809: 4794: 4787: 4781: 4768: 4764: 4760: 4753: 4752: 4745: 4741: 4735: 4696: 4686: 4685: 4679:actually a cat. 4678:not</em: --> 4676: 4675: 4659: 4656:...</em: --> 4654: 4640: 4634: 4629: 4623: 4622: 4615: 4608: 4604: 4598: 4588: 4558: 4555:January 1 and 2 4554: 4545:instead of the 4539: 4538: 4531: 4524: 4520: 4514: 4489: 4484: 4476: 4472: 4469: 4460: 4453: 4449: 4445: 4441: 4430: 4426: 4420: 4412: 4407:Avoid devising 4405: 4395: 4391: 4382: 4374: 4371:approximate(ly) 4370: 4366: 4359: 4350: 4333: 4326: 4319: 4298: 4294: 4290: 4286: 4285:or the archaic 4282: 4278: 4274: 4270: 4266: 4262: 4258: 4254: 4250: 4245: 4238: 4221: 4217: 4213: 4211: 4210: 4203: 4196: 4189: 4185: 4179: 4172: 4164: 4160: 4156: 4149: 4145: 4141: 4137: 4133: 4129: 4118: 4109: 4101: 4086: 4077: 4073: 4069: 4062: 4059: 4056: 4051: 4050: 4043: 4036: 4032: 4026: 4000:, which use an 3994: 3988: 3982: 3973: 3969: 3965: 3961: 3957: 3950: 3943: 3937: 3936: 3929: 3922: 3918: 3912: 3906: 3877: 3861: 3857: 3850: 3834: 3830: 3826: 3823: 3810: 3797: 3793: 3789: 3786:South-East Asia 3785: 3781: 3777: 3767:southern Poland 3766: 3754: 3750: 3739: 3735: 3731: 3727: 3716: 3710: 3701: 3697: 3685: 3681: 3677: 3673: 3669: 3662: 3658: 3654: 3650: 3646: 3627: 3621: 3615: 3576: 3570: 3564: 3558: 3553:German Shepherd 3552: 3538: 3532: 3522: 3517: 3511: 3505: 3499: 3493: 3487: 3481: 3475: 3469: 3463: 3457: 3451: 3445: 3439: 3422: 3419:'Red Delicious' 3417:Malus domestica 3415: 3391: 3383: 3379: 3375: 3371: 3363:Acacia coriacea 3361: 3355: 3349: 3343: 3337: 3328: 3305: 3304: 3297: 3293: 3287: 3275: 3271: 3267: 3263: 3260:her last summer 3259: 3249: 3245: 3241: 3237: 3233: 3226: 3220: 3207: 3194: 3189: 3183: 3177: 3171: 3165: 3159: 3153: 3140: 3136: 3132: 3128: 3115: 3111: 3107: 3103: 3099: 3095: 3085: 3082:annual flooding 3081: 3077: 3074:the Great Flood 3073: 3063: 3059: 3055: 3051: 3047: 3043: 3039: 3027: 3023: 3019: 3015: 3011: 3001: 2991: 2987: 2983: 2979: 2975: 2971: 2967: 2963: 2959: 2955: 2951: 2947: 2943: 2930: 2926: 2922: 2918: 2914: 2910: 2906: 2902:Religious texts 2894: 2890: 2883: 2877: 2871: 2865: 2855: 2851: 2847: 2843: 2839: 2836:president Obama 2835: 2832:President Obama 2831: 2821: 2817: 2813: 2794: 2788: 2773: 2761: 2752:quotation marks 2737: 2727: 2708: 2702: 2700:Titles of works 2690:titles of works 2667: 2656: 2652: 2648: 2644: 2637: 2631: 2600: 2594: 2592:Capital letters 2584:subst:uw-engvar 2581: 2556: 2545: 2535: 2534: 2527: 2523: 2517: 2493: 2438:British English 2428:Hiberno-English 2376: 2366: 2365: 2358: 2354: 2348: 2313: 2309: 2305: 2301: 2297: 2290: 2259: 2253: 2244: 2241:British English 2236: 2231: 2223: 2222: 2217:MOS:COMMONALITY 2215: 2211: 2205: 2191: 2187: 2183: 2176: 2172: 2159:titles of works 2148: 2142: 2141: 2134: 2127: 2123: 2117: 2103:and especially 2096: 2092: 2082:English plurals 2054:British English 2046: 2036: 2035: 2028: 2024: 2018: 1986: 1972: 1971: 1966: 1958: 1954: 1950: 1947: 1936: 1935: 1930: 1920: 1919: 1905: 1904: 1897: 1893: 1878: 1873: 1872: 1866: 1865: 1861:Implications== 1859: 1858: 1851: 1850: 1844: 1833: 1832: 1825: 1821: 1793: 1789: 1776: 1772: 1768: 1764: 1763: 1756: 1749: 1745: 1726:pseudo-headings 1721: 1688: 1687: 1680: 1676: 1647: 1646: 1639: 1635: 1625: 1621: 1610: 1592: 1591: 1586:MOS:SECTIONHEAD 1584: 1577: 1570: 1563: 1559: 1553: 1519: 1496:and appropriate 1456: 1448: 1444: 1436: 1402: 1394: 1379: 1360: 1352: 1334: 1319: 1275: 1269: 1268: 1261: 1257: 1251: 1214:(1814 schooner) 1209: 1203: 1195: 1189: 1182: 1178: 1162: 1156: 1151: 1147: 1143: 1116: 1108: 1097: 1093: 1085: 1067: 1061: 1056: 1055: 1048: 1044: 1038: 971: 964: 963: 956: 949: 942: 938: 932: 882:Manual of Style 874: 824: 823: 744: 736: 735: 730: 729: 705: 695: 694: 638: 628: 627: 613: 603: 602: 508: 498: 497: 488: 478: 477: 391:Anime and manga 382: 372: 371: 357: 346: 338: 337: 313: 303: 302: 298:Trivia sections 278: 268: 267: 253:Image placement 243: 233: 232: 228:Titles of works 223:Text formatting 193: 183: 182: 173:Self-references 153:Gender identity 126: 116: 110: 90: 89: 82: 78: 70: 69: 56:may apply. Any 36: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 20702: 20692: 20691: 20674: 20673: 20670: 20669: 20667: 20660: 20658: 20651: 20649: 20642: 20640: 20633: 20631: 20624: 20622: 20614: 20613: 20610: 20609: 20607:Writing guides 20604: 20603: 20596: 20589: 20581: 20572: 20571: 20569: 20568: 20561: 20560: 20559: 20544: 20521: 20518: 20517: 20514: 20513: 20511: 20510: 20508:Privacy policy 20505: 20500: 20495: 20490: 20484: 20482: 20467: 20458: 20457: 20454: 20453: 20451: 20450: 20445: 20440: 20439: 20438: 20428: 20427: 20426: 20415: 20413: 20398: 20391: 20390: 20387: 20386: 20383: 20382: 20380: 20379: 20374: 20372:Categorization 20369: 20363: 20361: 20360:Classification 20357: 20356: 20354: 20353: 20348: 20343: 20338: 20333: 20328: 20323: 20318: 20317: 20316: 20305: 20303: 20299: 20298: 20296: 20295: 20290: 20285: 20280: 20278:Disambiguation 20275: 20270: 20269: 20268: 20257: 20251: 20239: 20238: 20236: 20235: 20233:Editing policy 20229: 20227: 20212: 20205: 20204: 20201: 20200: 20198: 20197: 20192: 20187: 20182: 20180:Administrators 20176: 20174: 20159: 20152: 20151: 20148: 20147: 20145: 20144: 20139: 20134: 20129: 20124: 20123: 20122: 20112: 20106: 20104: 20089: 20082: 20081: 20078: 20077: 20075: 20074: 20073: 20072: 20062: 20057: 20052: 20047: 20042: 20037: 20032: 20027: 20022: 20016: 20014: 20002: 20001: 19999: 19998: 19993: 19988: 19983: 19978: 19973: 19968: 19963: 19958: 19953: 19948: 19943: 19938: 19932: 19930: 19915: 19908: 19907: 19904: 19903: 19901: 19900: 19898:External links 19895: 19890: 19885: 19880: 19875: 19870: 19869: 19868: 19858: 19856:Citing sources 19853: 19848: 19842: 19840: 19828: 19827: 19825: 19824: 19822:Article titles 19819: 19814: 19804: 19799: 19794: 19789: 19784: 19778: 19776: 19761: 19754: 19753: 19751: 19750: 19749: 19748: 19733: 19730: 19729: 19721:Knowledge key 19718: 19717: 19710: 19703: 19695: 19686: 19685: 19683: 19682: 19669: 19666: 19665: 19656: 19654: 19653: 19651: 19647: 19646: 19644: 19643: 19638: 19633: 19628: 19623: 19618: 19613: 19608: 19603: 19598: 19593: 19588: 19583: 19578: 19573: 19571:Citing sources 19568: 19566:Categorization 19563: 19558: 19556:Article titles 19553: 19547: 19545: 19541: 19540: 19538: 19537: 19536: 19535: 19528:Figure skating 19525: 19524: 19523: 19512: 19510: 19506: 19505: 19503: 19502: 19497: 19492: 19491: 19490: 19485: 19480: 19475: 19470: 19460: 19455: 19449: 19447: 19443: 19442: 19440: 19439: 19434: 19428: 19426: 19422: 19421: 19419: 19418: 19413: 19408: 19403: 19398: 19393: 19388: 19383: 19378: 19373: 19368: 19363: 19358: 19353: 19348: 19343: 19338: 19333: 19327: 19325: 19321: 19320: 19318: 19317: 19311: 19309: 19305: 19304: 19302: 19301: 19296: 19291: 19286: 19280: 19278: 19274: 19273: 19271: 19270: 19265: 19260: 19255: 19250: 19245: 19240: 19235: 19230: 19225: 19220: 19214: 19212: 19208: 19207: 19205: 19204: 19199: 19193: 19191: 19187: 19186: 19184: 19183: 19178: 19176:Road junctions 19173: 19171:Lists of works 19168: 19162: 19160: 19156: 19155: 19153: 19152: 19147: 19142: 19137: 19131: 19129: 19125: 19124: 19122: 19121: 19116: 19111: 19106: 19100: 19098: 19094: 19093: 19091: 19090: 19085: 19080: 19075: 19070: 19065: 19063:Capitalization 19060: 19054: 19052: 19048: 19047: 19045: 19044: 19042:Words to watch 19039: 19034: 19029: 19024: 19019: 19014: 19013: 19012: 19002: 18997: 18991: 18989: 18985: 18984: 18982: 18981: 18974: 18967: 18959: 18956: 18955: 18948: 18947: 18940: 18933: 18925: 18902: 18901: 18893: 18885: 18877: 18869: 18861: 18842: 18838:CMS Crib Sheet 18819:Main article: 18816: 18813: 18810: 18809: 18783: 18742: 18717: 18716: 18714: 18711: 18708: 18707: 18675: 18672: 18671:mobile version 18645: 18632: 18628:Google Scholar 18611: 18575: 18558: 18529: 18511: 18478: 18457: 18436: 18412: 18402: 18385: 18383: 18382: 18376: 18362: 18353: 18333:breed standard 18318: 18271: 18260: 18236: 18205: 18191: 18177: 18154: 18142:image captions 18134:section titles 18130:article titles 18110: 18089: 18065: 18033: 18007: 18006: 18004: 18001: 18000: 17999: 17989: 17988: 17987: 17981: 17972: 17971: 17970: 17964: 17958: 17948: 17947: 17946: 17945: 17939: 17933: 17927: 17921: 17914:Proper names: 17909: 17908: 17900: 17895: 17892: 17889: 17877: 17874: 17873: 17872: 17866: 17865: 17864: 17852: 17844: 17841: 17840: 17839: 17833: 17825: 17822: 17821: 17820: 17791: 17785: 17779: 17773: 17770:Citing sources 17767: 17761: 17755: 17754: 17753: 17747: 17741: 17729: 17721: 17718: 17717: 17716: 17710: 17704: 17698: 17692: 17686: 17680: 17674: 17671:Editing policy 17666: 17663: 17660: 17659:in addition to 17617: 17614: 17606: 17605: 17600: 17541: 17540: 17532: 17527: 17524: 17521: 17511:, integrating 17450: 17449:clear majority 17438:image captions 17430:embedded lists 17419: 17379: 17378: 17371: 17364: 17356: 17351: 17348: 17345: 17255: 17254: 17239: 17224: 17209: 17194: 17179: 17170: 17155: 17140: 17125: 17110: 17094: 17090: 17089: 17048: 17033: 17029:19&nbsp;kg 16995: 16994: 16986: 16981: 16978: 16975: 16929: 16928: 16920: 16915: 16912: 16909: 16902: 16879: 16856: 16849: 16848: 16840: 16835: 16826: 16823: 16819:font-size: 8pt 16816: 16813:) rather than 16811:font-size: 85% 16808: 16803: 16802: 16799: 16788: 16772:§ Color coding 16759: 16756: 16684:KISS principle 16667: 16666: 16659: 16651: 16646: 16643: 16640: 16638: 16635: 16603: 16602: 16597: 16595:History of NIH 16591: 16585: 16584: 16577: 16569: 16568: 16560:External links 16549: 16548:External links 16546: 16507:: Knowledge's 16482: 16450: 16447: 16445: 16442: 16441: 16440: 16439: 16438: 16435:other elements 16432: 16426: 16420: 16411: 16410: 16409: 16406: 16403: 16397: 16396: 16395: 16385: 16370: 16348: 16347: 16340: 16337:MOS:LISTBULLET 16332: 16327: 16324: 16321: 16320: 16319: 16316: 16313: 16310: 16303: 16298: 16295: 16282: 16281: 16273: 16268: 16265: 16262: 16251:screen readers 16244: 16237: 16236: 16228: 16223: 16214: 16211: 16200: 16197: 16196: 16195: 16184: 16180: 16165: 16162: 16155: 16125: 16124: 16116: 16111: 16108: 16105: 16097: 16094: 16062:Junípero Serra 16056: 16051: 16050: 16033: 15973: 15972: 15965: 15957: 15952: 15949: 15946: 15863: 15862: 15854: 15849: 15846: 15843: 15842: 15841: 15830: 15823: 15816: 15809: 15802: 15793: 15790: 15746:manner, e.g., 15744:words-as-words 15693: 15692: 15673: 15658: 15631:Latin alphabet 15580:Greek alphabet 15556: 15555: 15552:MOS:DIACRITICS 15548: 15541: 15534: 15527: 15519: 15514: 15511: 15508: 15488: 15485: 15419: 15416: 15395: 15394: 15387: 15380: 15372: 15367: 15364: 15361: 15351: 15350: 15347: 15343: 15339: 15322: 15319: 15300:article titles 15268: 15267: 15260: 15252: 15247: 15244: 15241: 15185: 15184: 15176: 15171: 15158: 15155: 15080: 14998:Help:Footnotes 14992: 14991: 14984: 14977: 14970: 14963: 14956: 14948: 14943: 14940: 14937: 14924: 14921: 14910: 14909: 14901: 14896: 14821: 14820: 14813: 14805: 14800: 14773: 14770: 14730: 14729: 14721: 14716: 14713: 14710: 14708: 14705: 14685: 14684: 14668: 14652: 14647: 14637: 14632: 14627: 14619: 14571: 14570: 14563: 14556: 14549: 14542: 14534: 14529: 14526: 14523: 14470: 14416:as in Arabic. 14392:two excursuses 14349: 14348: 14341: 14333: 14328: 14325: 14322: 14321: 14320: 14302: 14301: 14300: 14262: 14251: 14240: 14219: 14174: 14167: 14166: 14159: 14152: 14145: 14137: 14132: 14129: 14126: 14125: 14124: 14095: 14055: 14054: 14047: 14040: 14033: 14025: 14020: 14017: 14014: 14005: 14004: 13996: 13991: 13988: 13985: 13974: 13962: 13961:Official names 13959: 13958: 13957: 13927: 13922: 13915:my sons' wives 13904: 13903: 13900:MOS:PLURALNOUN 13895: 13890: 13887: 13884: 13807: 13806:Singular nouns 13804: 13787: 13786: 13779: 13771: 13766: 13763: 13760: 13757: 13756: 13748: 13743: 13740: 13737: 13736: 13735: 13717: 13694: 13693: 13692: 13681: 13655: 13654: 13653: 13634: 13619: 13608: 13578: 13569:respectively; 13542: 13528:Exponentiation 13525: 13480: 13456: 13455: 13452:MOS:COMMONMATH 13447: 13442: 13439: 13436: 13435: 13434: 13432: 13419: 13396: 13385: 13374: 13367: 13351: 13344: 13325: 13324: 13323: 13312: 13305: 13283: 13280: 13279: 13278: 13265: 13260: 13246: 13241:Swedish kronor 13234: 13207: 13200: 13198: 13177: 13174: 13173: 13172: 13147: 13124:three per cent 13112: 13097: 13077: 13074:U.S. customary 13066: 13047: 13037: 13024: 13021: 13018: 13017: 13012: 13011: 13006: 13005: 13000: 12999: 12963: 12960: 12952: 12951: 12932: 12921: 12890: 12887: 12886: 12885: 12874: 12855: 12840: 12837: 12836: 12835: 12828: 12813: 12810: 12809: 12808: 12804: 12803: 12802: 12793: 12790: 12746:MOS:DATEFORMAT 12741: 12738: 12737: 12736: 12717: 12655: 12652: 12629: 12628:Dates and time 12626: 12617: 12614: 12613: 12612: 12594: 12590: 12588: 12581: 12573: 12572: 12562: 12536: 12532: 12525:and sometimes 12500:Reference tags 12489: 12488: 12481: 12474: 12467: 12460: 12453: 12445: 12440: 12437: 12434: 12431: 12430: 12425: 12424: 12419: 12418: 12413: 12412: 12407: 12406: 12401: 12399: 12394: 12393: 12388: 12386: 12381: 12380: 12375: 12374: 12361: 12360: 12352: 12347: 12344: 12341: 12321: 12320: 12317:MOS:PUNCTSPACE 12313: 12305: 12300: 12297: 12294: 12293: 12292: 12278: 12267: 12260: 12254: 12253: 12246: 12239: 12231: 12226: 12216: 12213: 12141: 12140: 12127: 12126: 12121: 12120: 12103: 12102: 12097: 12096: 12087: 12086: 12081: 12080: 12075: 12074: 12069: 12068: 12063: 12062: 12009: 12008: 12001: 11994: 11987: 11984:MOS:NUMBERSIGN 11979: 11974: 11971: 11968: 11965: 11964: 11961: 11955: 11954: 11951: 11945: 11944: 11941: 11934: 11933: 11930: 11924: 11923: 11920: 11910: 11909: 11906: 11900: 11899: 11896: 11890: 11889: 11887: 11884: 11882: 11857: 11854: 11816:Avoid writing 11812: 11811: 11803: 11798: 11795: 11792: 11774: 11770: 11753: 11750: 11744: 11740: 11677: 11676: 11669: 11658: 11657: 11654:not applicable 11642: 11635: 11624: 11613: 11607:is pronounced 11600:pronunciations 11546: 11545: 11538: 11531: 11523: 11518: 11508: 11505: 11467:following the 11430: 11429: 11421: 11416: 11413: 11410: 11405:will produce: 11358: 11355: 11344: 11332: 11322: 11319: 11307: 11306: 11301: 11296: 11287: 11286: 11275: 11274: 11266: 11261: 11258: 11255: 11237: 11236: 11231: 11226: 11219: 11212: 11205: 11195: 11182: 11181: 11178:MOS:SUFFIXDASH 11174: 11171:MOS:PREFIXDASH 11167: 11159: 11154: 11151: 11148: 11144: 11143: 11133: 11132: 11122: 11116: 11103: 11102: 11084: 11059: 11058: 11053: 11052:combining form 11040: 11031: 11022: 11002: 11001: 10993: 10988: 10984: 10983: 10977: 10967: 10952: 10951: 10942: 10933: 10916: 10895: 10885: 10860: 10850: 10844: 10834: 10816: 10810: 10794: 10787: 10786: 10778: 10773: 10770: 10752: 10751: 10750: 10749:constructions) 10746: 10742: 10724: 10723: 10716: 10708: 10704:6:00–9:30 p.m. 10676: 10653:1–17 September 10649: 10635: 10607: 10606: 10596: 10594:from 1961–1964 10587: 10578: 10569: 10567:450–500 people 10537: 10536: 10504: 10503: 10496: 10489: 10482: 10474: 10469: 10466: 10456: 10455: 10454: 10448: 10442: 10437: 10426: 10425: 10418: 10410: 10405: 10401: 10400: 10372: 10356: 10355: 10354: 10353:on both sides: 10352: 10349:An en dash is 10342: 10341: 10340: 10339:on both sides: 10338: 10335:An em dash is 10327: 10324: 10284:article titles 10279: 10276: 10258: 10257: 10240: 10201: 10200: 10193: 10186: 10178: 10173: 10163: 10160: 10152:UNICODE HYPHEN 10144:ASCII/UNICODE 10118: 10104: 10103: 10100:MOS:SOFTHYPHEN 10096: 10088: 10083: 10079: 10019:Trois-Rivières 9936: 9935: 9925: 9924: 9919: 9918: 9913: 9912: 9907: 9906: 9901: 9900: 9895: 9894: 9889: 9888: 9883: 9882: 9872: 9871: 9866: 9865: 9860: 9859: 9852: 9851: 9850: 9849: 9848: 9837: 9822:hanging hyphen 9811: 9810: 9803: 9795: 9790: 9787: 9773: 9738: 9681: 9648: 9622: 9612: 9598: 9591: 9576: 9550: 9549: 9548: 9521:pre-industrial 9513:non-negotiable 9501: 9455: 9452:Omar al-Bashir 9437: 9430: 9429: 9422: 9415: 9414: 9413: 9412: 9411: 9404: 9397: 9396: 9392: 9385: 9384: 9380: 9373: 9372: 9371: 9370: 9369: 9356: 9355: 9347: 9342: 9339: 9336: 9333: 9332: 9327: 9325: 9320: 9319: 9314: 9296: 9295: 9290: 9288: 9283: 9282: 9277: 9267: 9266: 9261: 9259: 9254: 9253: 9248: 9238:When the word 9234: 9233: 9228: 9226: 9221: 9220: 9215: 9205:When the word 9194: 9193: 9185: 9180: 9177: 9174: 9171: 9170: 9165: 9163: 9158: 9157: 9152: 9150: 9138: 9137: 9132: 9130: 9125: 9124: 9119: 9117: 9104: 9103: 9093: 9091: 9086: 9085: 9069: 9067: 9051: 9050: 9045: 9044: 9039: 9038: 9033: 9032: 9020: 9019: 9014: 9013: 9008: 9007: 9002: 9001: 8974: 8973: 8966: 8959: 8951: 8946: 8943: 8940: 8901: 8880: 8879: 8871: 8866: 8863: 8860: 8859: 8858: 8857: 8856: 8855: 8854: 8843: 8822: 8821: 8820: 8801: 8800: 8799: 8798: 8797: 8785: 8784: 8778: 8769: 8768: 8767: 8752: 8749: 8737: 8731: 8710: 8708:– serial comma 8704: 8667: 8666: 8659: 8652: 8645: 8637: 8632: 8629: 8626: 8625: 8624: 8613: 8610: 8609: 8604: 8603: 8598: 8597: 8592: 8591: 8576: 8575: 8572:MOS:QUOTECOMMA 8567: 8562: 8560: 8557: 8556: 8551: 8550: 8545: 8544: 8539: 8538: 8520: 8519: 8511: 8506: 8504: 8501: 8500: 8495: 8494: 8489: 8488: 8483: 8482: 8470: 8469: 8464: 8463: 8458: 8457: 8452: 8451: 8435: 8434: 8426: 8421: 8419: 8416: 8415: 8410: 8408: 8403: 8402: 8397: 8395: 8386: 8383: 8382: 8373: 8372: 8367: 8366: 8357: 8356: 8347: 8344: 8343: 8338: 8337: 8332: 8331: 8326: 8325: 8320: 8319: 8314: 8313: 8297: 8296: 8290: 8289: 8284: 8283: 8277: 8276: 8271: 8270: 8265: 8264: 8236: 8235: 8228: 8220: 8215: 8212: 8209: 8208: 8207: 8203: 8196: 8193: 8183: 8175: 8174: 8173: 8172: 8171: 8170: 8160: 8159: 8158: 8150: 8126: 8092:the quotation 8074: 8073: 8066: 8059: 8052: 8044: 8039: 8036: 8033: 7982: 7981: 7974: 7969: 7968: 7961: 7956: 7955: 7946: 7936: 7935: 7926: 7906: 7903: 7892: 7889: 7884: 7883: 7872: 7850: 7839: 7838: 7826: 7822: 7810: 7806: 7794: 7782: 7781: 7776: 7771: 7766: 7728: 7727: 7720: 7713: 7705: 7700: 7697: 7694: 7693: 7692: 7690:began in 1991. 7688:"Lost Decades" 7684: 7680: 7672: 7668: 7660: 7656: 7654:after a vowel. 7648: 7644: 7628: 7619: 7618: 7605: 7601: 7588: 7579: 7576: 7575: 7574: 7559: 7555: 7540: 7536: 7509: 7492: 7489: 7488: 7487: 7483: 7479: 7475: 7471: 7467: 7463: 7459: 7451: 7450: 7445: 7435: 7434: 7429: 7421: 7408: 7407: 7402: 7392: 7391: 7386: 7382: 7377: 7373: 7368: 7341: 7340: 7333: 7326: 7319: 7311: 7306: 7303: 7300: 7291: 7290: 7287: 7284: 7281: 7278: 7274: 7262: 7257: 7256: 7249: 7246: 7243: 7240: 7237: 7234: 7230: 7225: 7224: 7219: 7214: 7211: 7201: 7195: 7185: 7182: 7181: 7180: 7171:words-as-words 7167: 7166: 7161: 7152: 7151: 7149: 7141: 7139: 7127: 7126: 7117: 7116: 7107: 7106: 7101: 7081: 7080: 7077:MOS:QUOTEPUNCT 7072: 7067: 7064: 7061: 7060: 7059: 7058: 7057: 7029: 7008: 7007: 7006: 6980: 6979: 6971: 6966: 6963: 6960: 6959: 6958: 6952: 6946: 6884: 6883: 6867: 6866: 6855: 6854: 6847: 6839: 6834: 6831: 6828: 6827: 6826: 6756: 6732: 6731: 6724: 6717: 6709: 6704: 6701: 6698: 6697: 6696: 6689: 6667: 6636: 6574: 6573: 6566: 6559: 6551: 6546: 6543: 6540: 6536:cultivar names 6520: 6519: 6512: 6505: 6502:MOS:QUOTEMARKS 6497: 6492: 6489: 6486: 6485: 6484: 6477: 6470: 6447: 6432: 6417: 6416: 6415: 6406: 6405: 6295: 6260: 6236: 6235: 6232:MOS:APOSTROPHE 6228: 6220: 6215: 6210: 6207: 6193: 6192: 6184: 6179: 6176: 6173: 6157: 6143: 6142: 6135: 6127: 6122: 6119: 6116: 6108:undue emphasis 6104:out-of-context 6100:editorializing 6087: 6086: 6079: 6071: 6066: 6048: 6045: 6011: 5986:{{blockquote}} 5981:, or deleted. 5963:{{blockquote}} 5952:{{blockquote}} 5920: 5919: 5916:MOS:BLOCKQUOTE 5912: 5904: 5899: 5896: 5893: 5882: 5881: 5874: 5866: 5861: 5858: 5855: 5846: 5843: 5828: 5822: 5819: 5818: 5817: 5801: 5800: 5795: 5790: 5780: 5776: 5775: 5766: 5758:words as words 5750: 5749: 5744: 5740: 5735: 5698: 5697: 5647: 5636: 5633:words-as-words 5594: 5590: 5569:within words, 5549: 5546: 5545: 5544: 5526: 5525: 5524: 5517: 5507: 5481: 5480: 5472: 5467: 5464: 5461: 5460: 5459: 5453: 5447: 5421: 5420: 5416:Unacceptable: 5414: 5392: 5391: 5383: 5378: 5375: 5372: 5282: 5281: 5274: 5267: 5260: 5252: 5247: 5224: 5221: 5176: 5175: 5172:MOS:QUOTATIONS 5168: 5161: 5153: 5148: 5125: 5122: 5121: 5120: 5095: 5091: 5088: 5083: 5079: 5072: 5067: 5057: 5056: 5048: 5043: 5040: 5037: 5036: 5035: 5032: 5012: 5009: 4985: 4984: 4977: 4969: 4964: 4961: 4958: 4905: 4902: 4871: 4868: 4848: 4844: 4799: 4780: 4779:Words as words 4777: 4751: 4750: 4742: 4737: 4734: 4733: 4728: 4723: 4717: 4711: 4705: 4695: 4692: 4691: 4690: 4682: 4633: 4630: 4621: 4620: 4613: 4605: 4600: 4597: 4594: 4537: 4536: 4529: 4521: 4516: 4513: 4510: 4496:will generate 4468: 4465: 4418: 4404: 4401: 4400: 4399: 4388: 4349: 4346: 4318: 4315: 4209: 4208: 4201: 4194: 4186: 4181: 4171: 4168: 4117: 4114: 4085: 4082: 4055: 4049: 4048: 4041: 4033: 4028: 4025: 4022: 4010:§ Contractions 3981: 3978: 3935: 3934: 3927: 3919: 3914: 3905: 3902: 3886:Greater London 3874:City of London 3809: 3806: 3778:Southeast Asia 3709: 3708:Compass points 3706: 3678:Alpha centauri 3674:Alpha Centauri 3614: 3611: 3607:Adélie penguin 3597:Adelie Penguin 3593:Adelie penguin 3589:Adélie Penguin 3494:Bryde's whales 3446:mountain maple 3426:Scolymus Group 3407:cultivar group 3303: 3302: 3294: 3289: 3286: 3283: 3280: 3279: 3272:Old Man Winter 3253: 3219: 3218:Calendar items 3216: 3215: 3214: 3144: 3119: 3089: 3067: 3005: 2995: 2964:the Horned One 2934: 2898: 2895:The Unitarians 2891:the Unitarians 2864: 2861: 2860: 2859: 2825: 2798:In generic use 2787: 2784: 2783: 2782: 2772: 2768: 2760: 2743: 2742: 2736: 2732: 2726: 2715: 2701: 2698: 2657:Tolkien wrote 2630: 2624: 2593: 2590: 2533: 2532: 2524: 2519: 2516: 2513: 2492: 2491: 2481: 2471: 2468:Indian English 2461: 2451: 2441: 2431: 2421: 2411: 2401: 2391: 2380: 2364: 2363: 2355: 2350: 2347: 2344: 2330: 2329: 2317: 2294: 2283: 2268: 2265:Indian English 2221: 2220: 2212: 2207: 2204: 2201: 2200: 2199: 2180: 2166: 2140: 2139: 2136:MOS:CONSISTENT 2132: 2124: 2119: 2116: 2113: 2101:MOS:DATEFORMAT 2034: 2033: 2025: 2020: 2017: 2014: 1985: 1982: 1943: 1940:</span: --> 1937:==Implications 1934: 1926: 1918: 1903: 1902: 1894: 1889: 1883: 1870: 1864: 1856: 1849: 1842: 1831: 1830: 1822: 1817: 1812: 1811: 1804: 1797: 1786: 1783: 1780: 1777:His early life 1762: 1761: 1754: 1746: 1741: 1733: 1732: 1729: 1714: 1711: 1703: 1696: 1686: 1685: 1677: 1672: 1670: 1669: 1645: 1644: 1636: 1631: 1614:article titles 1590: 1589: 1582: 1575: 1568: 1560: 1555: 1552: 1549: 1542: 1541: 1540: 1539: 1536:Stub templates 1533: 1527: 1513: 1504: 1492: 1486: 1475: 1472: 1454: 1442: 1414: 1413: 1410: 1387: 1368: 1349: 1327: 1280: 1267: 1266: 1258: 1253: 1250: 1247: 1226: 1225: 1218: 1186: 1167: 1124: 1105: 1060: 1059:Article titles 1057: 1054: 1053: 1045: 1040: 1037: 1034: 962: 961: 954: 947: 939: 934: 931: 928: 876: 875: 873: 872: 865: 858: 850: 847: 846: 845: 844: 839: 834: 826: 825: 822: 821: 816: 811: 806: 801: 796: 791: 786: 781: 776: 771: 769:Citing sources 766: 764:Categorization 761: 756: 754:Article titles 751: 745: 742: 741: 738: 737: 732: 731: 728: 727: 720:Figure skating 717: 706: 701: 700: 697: 696: 693: 692: 687: 682: 677: 672: 671: 670: 665: 660: 655: 650: 639: 634: 633: 630: 629: 626: 625: 620: 614: 609: 608: 605: 604: 601: 600: 595: 590: 585: 580: 575: 570: 565: 560: 555: 550: 545: 540: 535: 530: 525: 520: 515: 509: 504: 503: 500: 499: 496: 495: 489: 484: 483: 480: 479: 474: 473: 472: 471: 466: 461: 453: 452: 446: 445: 444: 443: 438: 433: 428: 423: 418: 413: 408: 403: 398: 393: 383: 378: 377: 374: 373: 370: 369: 364: 358: 353: 352: 347: 344: 343: 340: 339: 336: 335: 330: 328:Road junctions 325: 323:Lists of works 320: 314: 309: 308: 305: 304: 301: 300: 295: 290: 285: 279: 274: 273: 270: 269: 266: 265: 260: 255: 250: 244: 239: 238: 235: 234: 231: 230: 225: 220: 215: 210: 205: 203:Capitalization 200: 194: 189: 188: 185: 184: 181: 180: 178:Words to watch 175: 170: 165: 160: 155: 150: 149: 148: 138: 133: 127: 122: 121: 118: 117: 112: 108: 106: 103: 102: 92: 91: 88: 87: 79: 74: 71: 51: 50: 42: 40: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 20701: 20690: 20687: 20686: 20684: 20666: 20665: 20661: 20657: 20656: 20652: 20648: 20647: 20643: 20639: 20638: 20634: 20630: 20629: 20625: 20621: 20620: 20616: 20615: 20611: 20602: 20597: 20595: 20590: 20588: 20583: 20582: 20579: 20567: 20566: 20562: 20558: 20557: 20552: 20545: 20543: 20542: 20537: 20530: 20529: 20528: 20527: 20523: 20522: 20519: 20509: 20506: 20504: 20501: 20499: 20496: 20494: 20491: 20489: 20486: 20485: 20483: 20481: 20471: 20468: 20459: 20449: 20446: 20444: 20441: 20437: 20434: 20433: 20432: 20429: 20425: 20422: 20421: 20420: 20417: 20416: 20414: 20412: 20402: 20399: 20392: 20378: 20375: 20373: 20370: 20368: 20365: 20364: 20362: 20358: 20352: 20349: 20347: 20344: 20342: 20339: 20337: 20334: 20332: 20329: 20327: 20324: 20322: 20321:Accessibility 20319: 20315: 20312: 20311: 20310: 20307: 20306: 20304: 20300: 20294: 20291: 20289: 20286: 20284: 20281: 20279: 20276: 20274: 20271: 20267: 20266:Summary style 20264: 20263: 20262: 20259: 20258: 20255: 20252: 20250: 20240: 20234: 20231: 20230: 20228: 20226: 20216: 20213: 20206: 20196: 20193: 20191: 20188: 20186: 20183: 20181: 20178: 20177: 20175: 20173: 20163: 20160: 20153: 20143: 20140: 20138: 20135: 20133: 20130: 20128: 20125: 20121: 20118: 20117: 20116: 20113: 20111: 20108: 20107: 20105: 20103: 20093: 20090: 20083: 20071: 20068: 20067: 20066: 20063: 20061: 20058: 20056: 20053: 20051: 20048: 20046: 20043: 20041: 20038: 20036: 20033: 20031: 20028: 20026: 20023: 20021: 20018: 20017: 20015: 20013: 20003: 19997: 19994: 19992: 19989: 19987: 19984: 19982: 19979: 19977: 19974: 19972: 19969: 19967: 19964: 19962: 19959: 19957: 19954: 19952: 19949: 19947: 19944: 19942: 19939: 19937: 19934: 19933: 19931: 19929: 19919: 19916: 19909: 19899: 19896: 19894: 19891: 19889: 19886: 19884: 19881: 19879: 19876: 19874: 19871: 19867: 19864: 19863: 19862: 19859: 19857: 19854: 19852: 19851:Autobiography 19849: 19847: 19844: 19843: 19841: 19839: 19829: 19823: 19820: 19818: 19815: 19812: 19808: 19805: 19803: 19800: 19798: 19795: 19793: 19790: 19788: 19785: 19783: 19782:Verifiability 19780: 19779: 19777: 19775: 19765: 19762: 19755: 19747: 19746: 19742: 19741: 19740: 19739: 19735: 19734: 19731: 19724: 19716: 19711: 19709: 19704: 19702: 19697: 19696: 19693: 19681: 19680: 19671: 19670: 19667: 19652: 19648: 19642: 19639: 19637: 19634: 19632: 19629: 19627: 19624: 19622: 19619: 19617: 19614: 19612: 19609: 19607: 19604: 19602: 19599: 19597: 19594: 19592: 19589: 19587: 19584: 19582: 19579: 19577: 19574: 19572: 19569: 19567: 19564: 19562: 19559: 19557: 19554: 19552: 19549: 19548: 19546: 19542: 19534: 19531: 19530: 19529: 19526: 19522: 19519: 19518: 19517: 19514: 19513: 19511: 19507: 19501: 19498: 19496: 19493: 19489: 19486: 19484: 19481: 19479: 19476: 19474: 19471: 19469: 19466: 19465: 19464: 19461: 19459: 19456: 19454: 19451: 19450: 19448: 19444: 19438: 19435: 19433: 19430: 19429: 19427: 19423: 19417: 19414: 19412: 19409: 19407: 19404: 19402: 19399: 19397: 19394: 19392: 19389: 19387: 19384: 19382: 19379: 19377: 19374: 19372: 19369: 19367: 19364: 19362: 19359: 19357: 19354: 19352: 19349: 19347: 19344: 19342: 19339: 19337: 19334: 19332: 19329: 19328: 19326: 19322: 19316: 19313: 19312: 19310: 19306: 19300: 19297: 19295: 19294:Record charts 19292: 19290: 19289:Music samples 19287: 19285: 19282: 19281: 19279: 19275: 19269: 19266: 19264: 19261: 19259: 19256: 19254: 19251: 19249: 19246: 19244: 19241: 19239: 19236: 19234: 19231: 19229: 19226: 19224: 19221: 19219: 19216: 19215: 19213: 19209: 19203: 19200: 19198: 19195: 19194: 19192: 19188: 19182: 19179: 19177: 19174: 19172: 19169: 19167: 19164: 19163: 19161: 19157: 19151: 19148: 19146: 19143: 19141: 19138: 19136: 19133: 19132: 19130: 19126: 19120: 19117: 19115: 19112: 19110: 19107: 19105: 19102: 19101: 19099: 19095: 19089: 19086: 19084: 19081: 19079: 19076: 19074: 19073:Pronunciation 19071: 19069: 19066: 19064: 19061: 19059: 19058:Abbreviations 19056: 19055: 19053: 19049: 19043: 19040: 19038: 19035: 19033: 19030: 19028: 19025: 19023: 19020: 19018: 19015: 19011: 19008: 19007: 19006: 19003: 19001: 18998: 18996: 18995:Accessibility 18993: 18992: 18990: 18986: 18980: 18979: 18975: 18973: 18972: 18968: 18966: 18965: 18961: 18960: 18957: 18953: 18946: 18941: 18939: 18934: 18932: 18927: 18926: 18923: 18917: 18913: 18912: 18907: 18899: 18898: 18894: 18891: 18890: 18886: 18883: 18882: 18878: 18875: 18874: 18870: 18867: 18866: 18862: 18860: 18856: 18852: 18848: 18847: 18843: 18840: 18839: 18834: 18833: 18829: 18828: 18827: 18822: 18797: 18793: 18787: 18780: 18761: 18757: 18753: 18746: 18732: 18728: 18722: 18718: 18699: 18679: 18670: 18660: 18655: 18649: 18642: 18636: 18629: 18625: 18624:within limits 18621: 18615: 18608: 18606: 18601: 18597: 18593: 18589: 18585: 18579: 18570: 18562: 18547: 18544:performing a 18542: 18541:passive voice 18536: 18534: 18521: 18515: 18496: 18488: 18482: 18466:12–35 victory 18461: 18454: 18450: 18446: 18440: 18432: 18426: 18422: 18416: 18406: 18399: 18395: 18389: 18377: 18371: 18370: 18366: 18357: 18350: 18346: 18342: 18338: 18334: 18329: 18322: 18315: 18309: 18306: 18300: 18294: 18288: 18275: 18268: 18264: 18253: 18251: 18249: 18247: 18245: 18243: 18241: 18233: 18229: 18216: 18209: 18195: 18186: 18184: 18182: 18170: 18163:In early life 18158: 18151: 18147: 18143: 18139: 18138:table headers 18135: 18131: 18127: 18126:sentence case 18121: 18119: 18117: 18115: 18107: 18103: 18099: 18093: 18087: 18083: 18082:November 2005 18079: 18076:decisions in 18075: 18069: 18062: 18058: 18054: 18050: 18046: 18040: 18038: 18030: 18026: 18022: 18018: 18012: 18008: 17998: 17994: 17990: 17986: 17982: 17980: 17976: 17975: 17973: 17969: 17965: 17963: 17959: 17957: 17953: 17952: 17950: 17949: 17944: 17940: 17938: 17934: 17932: 17928: 17926: 17923:Place names: 17922: 17920: 17916: 17915: 17913: 17912: 17906: 17902: 17901: 17898: 17888: 17883: 17870: 17867: 17862: 17859: 17858: 17856: 17853: 17850: 17847: 17846: 17837: 17834: 17831: 17828: 17827: 17818: 17814: 17810: 17806: 17802: 17801: 17797: 17792: 17789: 17786: 17783: 17780: 17777: 17774: 17771: 17768: 17765: 17762: 17759: 17756: 17751: 17748: 17745: 17742: 17739: 17736: 17735: 17733: 17730: 17727: 17724: 17723: 17714: 17711: 17708: 17705: 17702: 17699: 17696: 17693: 17690: 17687: 17684: 17681: 17678: 17675: 17672: 17669: 17668: 17662: 17658: 17656: 17650: 17644: 17640: 17636: 17632: 17628: 17627:Pronunciation 17623: 17616:Pronunciation 17613: 17611: 17601: 17597: 17589: 17588: 17587: 17576: 17573: 17567: 17562: 17555: 17548: 17538: 17534: 17533: 17530: 17520: 17518: 17514: 17510: 17506: 17501: 17497: 17492: 17488: 17483: 17481: 17477: 17473: 17456: 17454: 17448: 17446: 17441: 17439: 17435: 17431: 17427: 17423: 17417: 17415: 17411: 17405: 17399: 17393: 17386: 17376: 17372: 17369: 17365: 17362: 17358: 17357: 17354: 17344: 17328: 17320: 17306: 17301: 17297: 17289: 17279: 17274: 17266: 17248: 17240: 17233: 17225: 17218: 17210: 17203: 17195: 17188: 17180: 17176: 17171: 17164: 17156: 17149: 17141: 17134: 17126: 17119: 17111: 17104: 17096: 17095: 17093: 17085: 17071: 17063: 17055: 17049: 17041: 17031: 17022: 17018: 17017: 17012: 17011: 17010: 17006: 17002: 16992: 16988: 16987: 16984: 16974: 16971: 16965: 16956: 16952: 16944: 16936: 16926: 16922: 16921: 16918: 16908: 16906: 16901:supplementary 16900: 16897: 16895: 16891: 16885: 16877: 16875: 16869: 16862: 16860: 16854: 16846: 16842: 16841: 16838: 16832: 16822: 16814: 16806: 16800: 16793: 16789: 16786: 16785: 16784: 16781: 16779: 16773: 16765: 16754: 16749: 16731: 16726: 16724: 16717: 16710: 16703: 16696: 16692: 16687: 16685: 16681: 16673: 16664: 16660: 16657: 16653: 16652: 16649: 16637:Miscellaneous 16634: 16632: 16627: 16623: 16615: 16609: 16601: 16598: 16596: 16593: 16592: 16590: 16578: 16571: 16570: 16567: 16561: 16555: 16545: 16543: 16539: 16534: 16528: 16524: 16520: 16515: 16510: 16506: 16502: 16500: 16488: 16484: 16480: 16477: 16471: 16469: 16462: 16456: 16436: 16433: 16430: 16427: 16424: 16421: 16418: 16415: 16414: 16412: 16407: 16404: 16401: 16400: 16398: 16393: 16392:"child" items 16389: 16388: 16386: 16381: 16377: 16371: 16368: 16367: 16365: 16359: 16355: 16345: 16341: 16338: 16334: 16333: 16330: 16317: 16314: 16311: 16308: 16304: 16301: 16300: 16294: 16289: 16279: 16275: 16274: 16271: 16261: 16259: 16254: 16252: 16248: 16242: 16234: 16230: 16229: 16226: 16220: 16210: 16206: 16193: 16185: 16181: 16178: 16174: 16170: 16166: 16163: 16160: 16156: 16149: 16148: 16146: 16142: 16138: 16132: 16122: 16118: 16117: 16114: 16103: 16093: 16091: 16088:, not of the 16087: 16083: 16079: 16075: 16071: 16067: 16063: 16058: 16054: 16047: 16037: 16034: 16031: 16027: 16024: 16023: 16022: 16019: 16017: 16011: 16007: 16000: 15998: 15993: 15989: 15984: 15980: 15970: 15966: 15963: 15959: 15958: 15955: 15945: 15942: 15936: 15934: 15927: 15921: 15916: 15914: 15909: 15907: 15901: 15893: 15887: 15881: 15877: 15870: 15860: 15856: 15855: 15852: 15839: 15835: 15831: 15828: 15824: 15821: 15817: 15814: 15813:§ Apostrophes 15810: 15807: 15803: 15800: 15796: 15795: 15789: 15787: 15782: 15778: 15771:|italic=unset 15766: 15758: 15754: 15750: 15745: 15741: 15738: 15731: 15727: 15723: 15721: 15720:§ Punctuation 15717: 15711: 15707: 15700: 15698: 15690: 15685: 15679: 15674: 15671: 15667: 15663: 15659: 15656: 15652: 15648: 15644: 15640: 15639: 15638: 15636: 15632: 15627: 15625: 15620: 15615: 15597: 15593: 15589: 15585: 15581: 15578:—such as the 15577: 15571: 15567: 15563: 15553: 15549: 15546: 15542: 15539: 15535: 15532: 15528: 15525: 15521: 15520: 15517: 15507: 15493: 15484: 15480: 15476: 15468: 15461: 15449: 15443: 15437: 15431: 15425: 15414: 15410: 15406: 15402: 15392: 15388: 15385: 15381: 15378: 15374: 15373: 15370: 15360: 15357: 15348: 15344: 15340: 15337: 15336: 15335: 15333: 15328: 15318: 15316: 15312: 15308: 15303: 15301: 15297: 15293: 15292:verifiability 15289: 15284: 15279: 15275: 15265: 15261: 15258: 15254: 15253: 15250: 15240: 15238: 15234: 15233:consisting of 15230: 15204: 15200: 15196: 15192: 15182: 15178: 15177: 15174: 15168: 15164: 15154: 15152: 15145: 15138: 15133: 15130: 15122: 15112: 15107: 15102:becomes just 15078: 15076: 15052: 15048: 15044: 15043:instructional 15040: 15036: 15027:remember that 15022: 15018: 15014: 15007: 15003: 14999: 14989: 14985: 14982: 14978: 14975: 14971: 14968: 14964: 14961: 14957: 14954: 14950: 14949: 14946: 14936: 14934: 14930: 14920: 14918: 14907: 14903: 14902: 14899: 14894: 14855:robotic probe 14847: 14841: 14835: 14834: 14828: 14818: 14814: 14811: 14807: 14806: 14803: 14797: 14790: 14786: 14779: 14769: 14754: 14748: 14743: 14737: 14727: 14723: 14722: 14719: 14704: 14700: 14689:Dún Aonghasa 14680: 14673: 14669: 14664: 14657: 14653: 14648: 14638: 14633: 14628: 14624: 14620: 14615: 14614: 14613: 14611: 14605: 14599: 14598:present tense 14593: 14589: 14585: 14578: 14568: 14564: 14561: 14557: 14554: 14550: 14547: 14543: 14540: 14536: 14535: 14532: 14522: 14520: 14516: 14509:team; but in 14508: 14504: 14498: 14494: 14480: 14476: 14468: 14466: 14462: 14458: 14454: 14450: 14446: 14442: 14438: 14434: 14430: 14426: 14422: 14417: 14414: 14405:as in Latin; 14403: 14401: 14389: 14385: 14381: 14380: 14375: 14374: 14366: 14360: 14356: 14346: 14342: 14339: 14335: 14334: 14331: 14317: 14313: 14307: 14303: 14298: 14292: 14284: 14276: 14270: 14269: 14267: 14263: 14252: 14245: 14244:passive voice 14241: 14234: 14227:may be used: 14226: 14225: 14220: 14205: 14204: 14203: 14199: 14193: 14189: 14182: 14178: 14172: 14164: 14160: 14157: 14153: 14150: 14146: 14143: 14139: 14138: 14135: 14115: 14114:passive voice 14106:We construct 14103: 14102: 14096: 14092: 14091:De re publica 14086: 14085: 14084: 14078: 14074: 14070: 14066: 14062: 14052: 14048: 14045: 14041: 14038: 14034: 14031: 14027: 14026: 14023: 14012: 14002: 13998: 13997: 13994: 13984: 13972: 13969: 13935: 13931: 13925: 13923: 13912: 13908: 13907: 13901: 13897: 13896: 13893: 13883: 13873: 13869: 13865: 13853: 13817: 13813: 13801: 13794: 13793:§ Apostrophes 13784: 13780: 13777: 13773: 13772: 13769: 13754: 13750: 13749: 13746: 13731: 13723: 13718: 13713: 13709: 13703: 13699: 13695: 13686: 13682: 13663: 13662: 13660: 13656: 13635: 13620: 13609: 13590: 13589: 13587: 13583: 13579: 13576: 13572: 13561: 13554: 13547: 13543: 13534: 13529: 13526: 13522: 13481: 13466: 13465: 13463: 13453: 13449: 13448: 13445: 13433:are unspaced. 13430: 13424: 13420: 13417: 13413: 13409: 13405: 13401: 13397: 13392: 13386: 13375: 13372: 13368: 13352: 13349: 13345: 13340: 13326: 13313: 13306: 13303: 13302: 13300: 13296: 13292: 13291: 13289: 13263: 13261: 13253: 13247: 13242: 13235: 13220: 13216: 13212: 13208: 13201: 13196: 13186: 13185: 13183: 13170: 13148: 13139: 13120:three percent 13113: 13110: 13098: 13081: 13078: 13075: 13071: 13067: 13064: 13053:, but either 13048: 13045: 13035: 13033: 13032: 13030: 13013: 13009: 13008: 13007: 13001: 12997: 12996: 12995: 12992: 12988: 12979: 12975: 12969: 12959: 12957: 12945: 12941: 12937: 12933: 12922: 12918:the year 1995 12911: 12907: 12906: 12904: 12900: 12896: 12881: 12875: 12856: 12853: 12849: 12848: 12846: 12829: 12822: 12821: 12819: 12805: 12794: 12791: 12788: 12784: 12783: 12781: 12777: 12776: 12775: 12759:June 10, 1921 12747: 12718: 12715: 12695: 12675: 12674: 12673: 12671: 12667: 12661: 12651: 12649: 12645: 12641: 12635: 12625: 12623: 12610: 12592: 12591: 12586: 12585: 12584: 12583: 12579: 12577: 12570: 12566: 12560: 12559: 12558: 12557: 12555: 12551: 12547: 12546:footnote list 12542: 12540: 12534: 12530: 12528: 12524: 12520: 12516: 12513:(also called 12512: 12511: 12501: 12496: 12486: 12482: 12479: 12475: 12472: 12468: 12465: 12461: 12458: 12457:MOS:PUNCTFOOT 12454: 12451: 12450:MOS:CITEPUNCT 12447: 12446: 12443: 12426: 12422: 12421: 12420: 12414: 12410: 12409: 12408: 12402: 12397: 12396: 12395: 12389: 12384: 12383: 12382: 12376: 12372: 12371: 12370: 12367: 12358: 12354: 12353: 12350: 12340: 12337: 12330: 12328: 12318: 12314: 12311: 12307: 12306: 12303: 12290: 12286: 12282: 12279: 12276: 12272: 12268: 12265: 12261: 12258: 12257: 12251: 12247: 12244: 12240: 12237: 12233: 12232: 12229: 12222: 12221:MOS:DATERANGE 12212: 12186: 12185:abbreviations 12167: 12137: 12133: 12128: 12124: 12123: 12122: 12113: 12109: 12104: 12100: 12099: 12098: 12088: 12084: 12083: 12082: 12076: 12072: 12071: 12070: 12064: 12060: 12059: 12058: 12055: 12053: 12035: 12031: 12023: 12016: 12006: 12002: 11999: 11995: 11992: 11988: 11985: 11981: 11980: 11977: 11962: 11957: 11956: 11952: 11947: 11946: 11942: 11936: 11935: 11931: 11926: 11925: 11921: 11912: 11911: 11907: 11902: 11901: 11897: 11892: 11891: 11885: 11880: 11879: 11873: 11871: 11870:Source Editor 11867: 11863: 11853: 11842:x, y, and/orz 11835: 11831: 11809: 11805: 11804: 11801: 11791: 11787: 11783: 11751: 11748: 11742: 11738: 11726: 11711: 11705: 11700: 11695: 11670: 11663: 11662: 11661: 11655: 11643: 11636: 11633: 11625: 11622: 11614: 11606: 11601: 11598: 11594: 11593: 11592: 11589: 11578: 11559: 11553: 11543: 11539: 11536: 11532: 11529: 11525: 11524: 11521: 11514: 11504: 11489:<math: --> 11458: 11443: 11437: 11427: 11423: 11422: 11419: 11409: 11406: 11399: 11390: 11384:For example, 11382: 11380: 11376: 11375:accessibility 11372: 11368: 11364: 11354: 11350: 11342: 11338: 11330: 11328: 11318: 11316: 11312: 11302: 11297: 11292: 11291: 11290: 11282: 11281: 11280: 11272: 11268: 11267: 11264: 11254: 11252: 11250: 11246: 11242: 11232: 11227: 11224: 11220: 11217: 11213: 11210: 11206: 11196: 11186: 11185: 11179: 11175: 11172: 11168: 11165: 11164:MOS:AFFIXDASH 11161: 11160: 11157: 11147: 11138: 11137: 11136: 11123: 11117: 11108: 11107: 11106: 11098: 11085: 11072: 11071: 11070: 11066: 11051: 11049: 11041: 11032: 11023: 11010: 11009: 11008: 10999: 10995: 10994: 10991: 10986: 10978: 10968: 10966: 10962: 10960:Guinea-Bissau 10957: 10956: 10955: 10943: 10934: 10931:on–off switch 10917: 10896: 10892:a 60–40 split 10886: 10861: 10851: 10845: 10835: 10829: 10825: 10817: 10811: 10798: 10797: 10796: 10792: 10784: 10783:MOS:ENBETWEEN 10780: 10779: 10776: 10769: 10765: 10761: 10757: 10729: 10728: 10727: 10717: 10713:28 mm – 17 m. 10709: 10677: 10663: 10659: 10650: 10636: 10622: 10621: 10620: 10615: 10597: 10588: 10579: 10570: 10565: 10564: 10563: 10561: 10557: 10552: 10548: 10542: 10524: 10523: 10522: 10518: 10511: 10501: 10497: 10494: 10490: 10487: 10483: 10480: 10476: 10475: 10472: 10465: 10461: 10449: 10443: 10438: 10433: 10432: 10431: 10423: 10419: 10416: 10412: 10411: 10408: 10403: 10397: 10392: 10391: 10390: 10387: 10383: 10371: 10367: 10350: 10348: 10347: 10336: 10334: 10333: 10332: 10323: 10321: 10317: 10313: 10309: 10308: 10307:eye-hand span 10303: 10299: 10295: 10294: 10293:eye–hand span 10285: 10275: 10272: 10269: 10254: 10246: 10241: 10232: 10231: 10230: 10228: 10220: 10219: 10210: 10209: 10198: 10194: 10191: 10187: 10184: 10180: 10179: 10176: 10169: 10159: 10156: 10153: 10147: 10141: 10137: 10135: 10128: 10122: 10116: 10114: 10110: 10109:Soft hyphens: 10101: 10097: 10094: 10090: 10089: 10086: 10081: 10077: 10073: 10067: 10063: 10062:Non-breaking: 10059: 10056: 10052:redirects to 10050: 10044: 10040: 10026: 10022: 10015: 10012: 10006: 10001: 9984: 9982: 9978: 9974: 9969: 9943: 9926: 9922: 9921: 9920: 9916:12-hour shift 9914: 9910: 9909: 9908: 9902: 9898: 9897: 9896: 9890: 9886: 9885: 9884: 9873: 9869: 9868: 9867: 9861: 9857: 9856: 9855: 9842: 9838: 9823: 9819: 9818: 9808: 9804: 9801: 9800:MOS:SUSPENDED 9797: 9796: 9793: 9788: 9784: 9774: 9759: 9755: 9743: 9739: 9720: 9714: 9688: 9682: 9655: 9649: 9621: 9620:predicatively 9618: 9611: 9610:substantively 9608: 9597: 9596:attributively 9594: 9592: 9577: 9558: 9557: 9555: 9551: 9502: 9499: 9495: 9487: 9479: 9475: 9474: 9460: 9456: 9445: 9444: 9434: 9419: 9401: 9389: 9377: 9368: 9362: 9353: 9349: 9348: 9345: 9328: 9323: 9322: 9321: 9315: 9313: 9312: 9309: 9306: 9301: 9291: 9286: 9285: 9284: 9278: 9276: 9275: 9272: 9262: 9257: 9256: 9255: 9249: 9247: 9246: 9243: 9241: 9229: 9224: 9223: 9222: 9216: 9214: 9213: 9210: 9208: 9203: 9201: 9191: 9187: 9186: 9183: 9166: 9161: 9160: 9159: 9153: 9148: 9147: 9146: 9143: 9133: 9128: 9127: 9126: 9120: 9115: 9114: 9113: 9110: 9101: 9094: 9089: 9088: 9087: 9083: 9082: 9077: 9070: 9065: 9064: 9063: 9060: 9058: 9046: 9042: 9041: 9040: 9034: 9030: 9029: 9028: 9025: 9015: 9011: 9010: 9009: 9003: 8999: 8998: 8997: 8994: 8988: 8981: 8971: 8967: 8964: 8960: 8957: 8956:MOS:SEMICOLON 8953: 8952: 8949: 8939: 8932: 8930: 8926: 8920: 8917: 8911: 8910:direct speech 8900: 8894: 8887: 8877: 8873: 8872: 8869: 8844: 8841: 8833: 8829: 8828: 8823: 8815: 8811: 8810: 8805: 8804: 8802: 8795: 8787: 8786: 8779: 8773: 8772: 8770: 8762: 8761: 8756: 8755: 8753: 8750: 8747: 8746: 8745: 8730: 8727: 8721: 8703: 8701: 8697: 8693: 8689: 8688:Harvard comma 8685: 8681: 8674: 8664: 8660: 8657: 8653: 8650: 8646: 8643: 8639: 8638: 8635: 8628:Serial commas 8620: 8614: 8605: 8601: 8600: 8599: 8593: 8589: 8588: 8587: 8583: 8579: 8573: 8569: 8568: 8565: 8552: 8548: 8547: 8546: 8540: 8536: 8535: 8534: 8530: 8529:parenthetical 8526: 8523: 8517: 8516:MOS:DATECOMMA 8513: 8512: 8509: 8496: 8492: 8491: 8490: 8484: 8480: 8479: 8478: 8475: 8465: 8461: 8460: 8459: 8453: 8449: 8448: 8447: 8443: 8442:parenthetical 8438: 8432: 8428: 8427: 8424: 8411: 8406: 8405: 8404: 8398: 8393: 8392: 8391: 8387: 8379: 8374: 8370: 8369: 8368: 8363: 8358: 8354: 8353: 8352: 8348: 8339: 8335: 8334: 8333: 8327: 8323: 8322: 8321: 8315: 8311: 8310: 8309: 8306: 8304: 8301:Always use a 8291: 8287: 8286: 8285: 8278: 8274: 8273: 8272: 8266: 8262: 8261: 8260: 8256: 8252: 8248: 8244: 8240: 8239: 8233: 8229: 8226: 8222: 8221: 8218: 8201: 8197: 8194: 8184: 8177: 8176: 8164: 8163: 8161: 8151: 8144: 8143: 8137: 8136: 8127: 8103: 8102: 8101: 8097: 8091: 8087: 8083: 8082: 8071: 8067: 8064: 8063:MOS:DOTDOTDOT 8060: 8057: 8053: 8050: 8046: 8045: 8042: 8032: 8010: 8005: 7991: 7980: 7979: 7975: 7971: 7970: 7967: 7966: 7962: 7958: 7957: 7954: 7952: 7947: 7938: 7937: 7934: 7932: 7927: 7918: 7917: 7914: 7912: 7902: 7891: 7887: 7873: 7869: 7858:X contains Y 7851: 7844: 7843: 7842: 7824: 7823: 7808: 7807: 7792: 7791: 7790: 7789: 7786: 7777: 7772: 7767: 7762: 7761: 7760: 7752: 7750: 7739: 7735: 7725: 7721: 7718: 7714: 7711: 7707: 7706: 7703: 7689: 7682: 7681: 7677: 7670: 7669: 7665: 7658: 7657: 7653: 7652:drops the "r" 7646: 7645: 7641: 7637: 7633: 7626: 7625: 7624: 7623: 7610: 7603: 7602: 7593: 7586: 7585: 7584: 7583: 7573:(Untemplated) 7570: 7569: 7564: 7557: 7556: 7554:(Untemplated) 7551: 7550: 7545: 7538: 7537: 7531: 7521: 7520: 7515: 7507: 7506: 7505: 7504: 7502: 7498: 7481: 7480: 7473: 7472: 7465: 7464: 7457: 7456: 7455: 7454: 7446: 7441: 7440: 7439: 7430: 7425: 7424: 7423: 7419: 7417: 7413: 7403: 7398: 7397: 7396: 7384: 7383: 7375: 7374: 7366: 7365: 7364: 7363: 7360: 7354: 7348: 7338: 7334: 7331: 7327: 7324: 7320: 7317: 7313: 7312: 7309: 7299: 7297: 7288: 7285: 7282: 7280:Concert tours 7279: 7276: 7275: 7273: 7270: 7267: 7260: 7254: 7250: 7247: 7244: 7241: 7238: 7235: 7232: 7231: 7229: 7223: 7220: 7218: 7215: 7212: 7209: 7205: 7202: 7199: 7196: 7193: 7190: 7189: 7176: 7175: 7174: 7172: 7162: 7157: 7156: 7155: 7147: 7142: 7137: 7132: 7131: 7130: 7122: 7121: 7120: 7112: 7111: 7110: 7102: 7095: 7088: 7087: 7086: 7078: 7074: 7073: 7070: 7054: 7047: 7043: 7039: 7038:George Herman 7034: 7030: 7026: 7020: 7016: 7015: 7013: 7009: 7003: 7002: 6996: 6995: 6990: 6989: 6987: 6986: 6985: 6977: 6976:MOS:BOLDQUOTE 6973: 6972: 6969: 6953: 6947: 6941: 6925: 6924: 6923: 6917: 6905: 6893: 6872: 6871: 6870: 6862: 6861: 6860: 6852: 6848: 6845: 6841: 6840: 6837: 6814: 6807: 6800: 6791: 6781: 6776: 6772: 6767: 6760: 6757: 6754: 6748: 6743: 6742: 6741: 6729: 6725: 6722: 6718: 6715: 6711: 6710: 6707: 6694: 6690: 6687: 6683: 6671: 6665: 6659: 6652:), low-high ( 6649: 6643: 6637: 6632: 6626: 6618: 6612: 6604: 6598: 6590: 6584: 6578: 6577: 6571: 6567: 6564: 6560: 6557: 6553: 6552: 6549: 6539: 6537: 6533: 6527: 6517: 6513: 6510: 6506: 6503: 6499: 6498: 6495: 6482: 6478: 6475: 6474:§ Possessives 6471: 6466: 6458: 6452: 6448: 6443: 6437: 6433: 6428: 6422: 6418: 6413: 6408: 6407: 6403: 6399: 6395: 6394:WP:COMMONNAME 6391: 6387: 6386: 6384: 6378: 6373: 6363: 6360:) and Arabic 6357: 6352: 6342: 6336: 6331: 6321: 6315: 6310: 6300: 6296: 6282: 6275: 6267: 6261: 6240: 6239: 6233: 6229: 6226: 6222: 6221: 6218: 6213: 6204: 6200: 6190: 6186: 6185: 6182: 6172: 6170: 6163: 6155: 6152: 6149: 6140: 6136: 6133: 6129: 6128: 6125: 6115: 6113: 6109: 6105: 6101: 6097: 6093: 6084: 6083:MOS:PULLQUOTE 6080: 6077: 6073: 6072: 6069: 6064: 6050: 6042: 6009: 6005: 5997: 5982: 5978: 5970: 5959: 5957: 5948: 5944: 5937: 5933: 5927: 5917: 5913: 5910: 5906: 5905: 5902: 5892: 5890: 5879: 5875: 5872: 5871:MOS:LINKQUOTE 5868: 5867: 5864: 5854: 5852: 5842: 5840: 5834: 5826: 5809: 5808: 5807: 5805:"The" → "he". 5796: 5791: 5786: 5785: 5784: 5772: 5764: 5763: 5762: 5761: 5759: 5755: 5742: 5741: 5733: 5732: 5731: 5730: 5728: 5727:scare-quoting 5723: 5721: 5715: 5707: 5704: 5694: 5688: 5684: 5683: 5678: 5674: 5673: 5668: 5664: 5663: 5658: 5654: 5653: 5648: 5643: 5637: 5634: 5630: 5624: 5618: 5614: 5608: 5600: 5592: 5588: 5556: 5550: 5547: 5534: 5533: 5531: 5527: 5522: 5518: 5515: 5511: 5510: 5508: 5505: 5501: 5497: 5493: 5492: 5491: 5488: 5478: 5474: 5473: 5470: 5454: 5448: 5443:Permissible: 5442: 5441: 5440: 5438: 5434: 5430: 5426: 5415: 5409: 5408: 5407: 5403: 5399: 5389: 5385: 5384: 5381: 5374:Point of view 5371: 5369: 5364: 5360: 5354: 5346: 5334: 5329: 5317: 5311:</ref: --> 5307: 5289: 5279: 5275: 5272: 5268: 5265: 5261: 5258: 5254: 5253: 5250: 5243: 5239: 5232: 5227: 5220: 5218: 5214: 5210: 5206: 5202: 5197: 5195: 5191: 5187: 5182: 5173: 5169: 5166: 5162: 5159: 5155: 5154: 5151: 5144: 5137: 5131: 5118: 5112: 5108: 5104: 5100: 5093: 5092: 5086: 5081: 5080: 5077: 5070: 5065: 5064: 5063: 5062: 5054: 5053:MOS:ITALPUNCT 5050: 5049: 5046: 5030: 5027:For example: 5026: 5025: 5024: 5020: 5008: 5006: 5002: 5001:block quoting 4998: 4992: 4982: 4981:MOS:ITALQUOTE 4978: 4975: 4971: 4970: 4967: 4957: 4954: 4950: 4945: 4940: 4936: 4926: 4920: 4915: 4911: 4901: 4898: 4892: 4886: 4877: 4867: 4864: 4857: 4855:for details). 4854: 4846: 4842: 4835: 4831: 4824: 4817: 4813: 4805: 4797: 4792: 4786: 4776: 4774: 4757: 4748: 4744: 4743: 4740: 4732: 4729: 4727: 4724: 4721: 4718: 4715: 4712: 4709: 4706: 4703: 4700: 4699: 4683: 4673: 4672: 4671: 4669: 4663: 4651: 4649: 4645: 4639: 4628: 4618: 4614: 4611: 4607: 4606: 4603: 4593: 4586: 4582: 4578: 4574: 4570: 4566: 4565: 4564:Up & Down 4552: 4548: 4544: 4534: 4530: 4527: 4523: 4522: 4519: 4509: 4507: 4503: 4493: 4480: 4473:<abbr: --> 4464: 4457: 4439: 4434: 4423: 4416: 4415:is good as a 4410: 4403:Do not invent 4396:Justice Smith 4389: 4378: 4364: 4363: 4362: 4357: 4352: 4345: 4340:, showing as 4337: 4332:, the use of 4331: 4330:approximately 4325:for examples. 4324: 4314: 4312: 4308: 4304: 4244: 4237:reasons, use 4236: 4231: 4229: 4228: 4218:United States 4206: 4202: 4199: 4195: 4192: 4188: 4187: 4184: 4177: 4167: 4127: 4123: 4113: 4107: 4099: 4095: 4091: 4081: 4066: 4054: 4046: 4042: 4039: 4035: 4034: 4031: 4021: 4019: 4015: 4011: 4007: 4003: 3999: 3993: 3987: 3980:Abbreviations 3977: 3962:encyclopaedia 3954: 3947: 3941: 3932: 3928: 3925: 3921: 3920: 3917: 3911: 3901: 3899: 3895: 3891: 3890:accessibility 3887: 3883: 3875: 3871: 3867: 3854: 3848: 3844: 3840: 3822: 3821: 3815: 3805: 3803: 3775: 3770: 3764: 3760: 3748: 3743: 3725: 3721: 3715: 3705: 3695: 3691: 3666: 3644: 3640: 3636: 3632: 3626: 3620: 3610: 3608: 3604: 3603: 3598: 3594: 3590: 3586: 3581: 3579: 3573: 3567: 3561: 3555: 3549: 3548: 3543: 3541: 3535: 3526: 3520: 3514: 3508: 3502: 3496: 3490: 3484: 3478: 3472: 3466: 3460: 3454: 3448: 3442: 3436: 3435: 3429: 3425: 3418: 3413: 3409: 3408: 3403: 3402: 3397: 3394: 3389: 3368: 3364: 3358: 3352: 3346: 3340: 3335: 3334: 3326: 3322: 3318: 3314: 3310: 3300: 3296: 3295: 3292: 3282: 3257: 3254: 3231: 3228: 3227: 3225: 3212: 3210: 3204: 3200: 3192: 3186: 3180: 3174: 3168: 3162: 3156: 3150: 3149: 3145: 3126: 3124: 3120: 3093: 3090: 3071: 3068: 3056:these priests 3037: 3033: 3009: 3006: 2999: 2996: 2988:the god Woden 2941: 2939: 2935: 2904: 2903: 2899: 2888: 2885: 2884: 2882: 2876: 2870: 2829: 2826: 2811: 2807: 2803: 2799: 2796: 2795: 2793: 2770: 2769: 2765: 2758: 2757: 2756: 2755: 2753: 2749: 2740: 2734: 2733: 2730: 2724: 2723: 2722: 2721: 2719: 2714: 2711: 2707: 2697: 2695: 2691: 2687: 2683: 2679: 2674: 2671: 2665: 2660: 2642: 2636: 2629: 2623: 2621: 2617: 2613: 2609: 2605: 2599: 2589: 2585: 2578: 2576: 2572: 2567: 2565: 2561: 2554: 2550: 2544: 2540: 2530: 2526: 2525: 2522: 2512: 2510: 2506: 2502: 2498: 2489: 2485: 2484:Wanchai Tower 2482: 2479: 2475: 2472: 2469: 2465: 2462: 2459: 2455: 2452: 2449: 2445: 2442: 2439: 2435: 2432: 2429: 2425: 2422: 2419: 2415: 2412: 2409: 2405: 2402: 2399: 2395: 2392: 2389: 2385: 2382: 2381: 2379: 2375: 2371: 2361: 2357: 2356: 2353: 2343: 2340: 2336: 2327: 2323: 2318: 2314:alternate law 2295: 2288: 2284: 2281: 2277: 2273: 2269: 2266: 2262: 2256: 2250: 2242: 2234: 2228: 2227: 2226: 2218: 2214: 2213: 2210: 2197: 2181: 2170: 2167: 2164: 2160: 2156: 2153: 2152: 2151: 2147: 2137: 2133: 2130: 2126: 2125: 2122: 2112: 2110: 2106: 2102: 2089: 2087: 2083: 2077: 2071: 2067: 2064:), spelling ( 2063: 2059: 2055: 2051: 2045: 2041: 2031: 2027: 2026: 2023: 2013: 2011: 2007: 2003: 1999: 1995: 1991: 1981: 1979: 1973:<br /: --> 1964: 1955:<span: --> 1933: 1924: 1917: 1914: 1910: 1900: 1896: 1895: 1892: 1887: 1885: 1884:the heading. 1881: 1871: 1848: 1840: 1838: 1828: 1824: 1823: 1820: 1815: 1809: 1805: 1802: 1798: 1787: 1784: 1781: 1766: 1765: 1759: 1758:MOS:NOBACKREF 1755: 1752: 1748: 1747: 1744: 1739: 1736: 1730: 1727: 1724:") to create 1719: 1715: 1712: 1708: 1704: 1701: 1697: 1694: 1690: 1689: 1683: 1679: 1678: 1675: 1667: 1666:section links 1663: 1662: 1661: 1658: 1656: 1652: 1642: 1641:MOS:BLANKLINE 1638: 1637: 1634: 1629: 1619: 1618:sentence case 1615: 1609: 1605: 1601: 1597: 1587: 1583: 1580: 1576: 1573: 1569: 1566: 1562: 1561: 1558: 1548: 1546: 1537: 1534: 1531: 1528: 1523: 1517: 1514: 1512: 1508: 1507: 1505: 1502: 1497: 1493: 1491: 1487: 1482: 1476: 1473: 1469: 1468: 1467: 1465: 1460: 1452: 1440: 1432: 1425: 1423: 1419: 1411: 1406: 1398: 1392: 1388: 1383: 1377: 1373: 1369: 1364: 1356: 1355:Use dmy dates 1350: 1346: 1338: 1332: 1328: 1323: 1317: 1313: 1312: 1311: 1309: 1305: 1300: 1298: 1294: 1292: 1286: 1278: 1274: 1264: 1260: 1259: 1256: 1246: 1243: 1237: 1235: 1234:§ Punctuation 1231: 1223: 1219: 1215: 1213: 1206: 1200: 1199: 1192: 1187: 1183:In early life 1176: 1172: 1169:Normally use 1168: 1165: 1159: 1141: 1137: 1133: 1129: 1125: 1122: 1112: 1106: 1103: 1091: 1090:sentence case 1083: 1082: 1081: 1079: 1074: 1072: 1066: 1051: 1047: 1046: 1043: 1033: 1030: 1024: 1022: 1018: 1014: 1010: 1006: 1001: 999: 995: 991: 986: 984: 980: 975: 969: 959: 955: 952: 948: 945: 941: 940: 937: 927: 924: 922: 918: 913: 909: 907: 903: 899: 895: 891: 887: 883: 871: 866: 864: 859: 857: 852: 851: 849: 848: 843: 840: 838: 835: 833: 830: 829: 828: 827: 820: 817: 815: 812: 810: 807: 805: 802: 800: 797: 795: 792: 790: 787: 785: 782: 780: 777: 775: 772: 770: 767: 765: 762: 760: 757: 755: 752: 750: 747: 746: 740: 739: 725: 721: 718: 715: 711: 708: 707: 704: 699: 698: 691: 688: 686: 683: 681: 678: 676: 673: 669: 666: 664: 661: 659: 656: 654: 651: 649: 646: 645: 644: 641: 640: 637: 632: 631: 624: 621: 619: 616: 615: 612: 607: 606: 599: 596: 594: 591: 589: 586: 584: 581: 579: 576: 574: 571: 569: 566: 564: 561: 559: 556: 554: 551: 549: 546: 544: 541: 539: 536: 534: 531: 529: 526: 524: 521: 519: 516: 514: 511: 510: 507: 502: 501: 494: 491: 490: 487: 482: 481: 470: 467: 465: 464:Record charts 462: 460: 459:Music samples 457: 456: 455: 454: 451: 448: 447: 442: 439: 437: 434: 432: 429: 427: 424: 422: 419: 417: 414: 412: 409: 407: 404: 402: 399: 397: 394: 392: 389: 388: 387: 386: 381: 376: 375: 368: 365: 363: 360: 359: 356: 351: 350: 345:By topic area 342: 341: 334: 331: 329: 326: 324: 321: 319: 316: 315: 312: 307: 306: 299: 296: 294: 291: 289: 286: 284: 281: 280: 277: 272: 271: 264: 261: 259: 256: 254: 251: 249: 246: 245: 242: 237: 236: 229: 226: 224: 221: 219: 216: 214: 213:Pronunciation 211: 209: 206: 204: 201: 199: 198:Abbreviations 196: 195: 192: 187: 186: 179: 176: 174: 171: 169: 166: 164: 161: 159: 156: 154: 151: 147: 144: 143: 142: 139: 137: 134: 132: 131:Accessibility 129: 128: 125: 120: 119: 105: 104: 101: 98: 97: 85: 81: 80: 77: 72: 67: 63: 59: 55: 49: 47: 41: 34: 33: 30: 19: 20662: 20654: 20653: 20644: 20635: 20626: 20617: 20563: 20554: 20546: 20539: 20531: 20524: 20488:Terms of Use 20473: 20424:WikiProjects 20404: 20341:Lead section 20308: 20261:Article size 20242: 20218: 20165: 20155:Enforcement 20095: 20005: 19981:Sockpuppetry 19971:Edit warring 19921: 19831: 19767: 19743: 19738:Five pillars 19736: 19677: 19641:WikiProjects 19551:Article size 19140:Lead section 18976: 18969: 18962: 18951: 18909: 18895: 18887: 18879: 18871: 18863: 18858: 18854: 18850: 18844: 18837: 18830: 18824: 18800:. Retrieved 18795: 18786: 18770: 18763:. Retrieved 18755: 18745: 18734:. Retrieved 18730: 18721: 18683:exhaustive: 18678: 18659:user sandbox 18648: 18635: 18614: 18604: 18578: 18561: 18524:<ref: --> 18514: 18507:&hairsp; 18481: 18460: 18444: 18439: 18421:attributives 18415: 18410:punctuation. 18405: 18397: 18393: 18388: 18365: 18356: 18321: 18281:parkinsonian 18274: 18208: 18194: 18157: 18146:list entries 18092: 18068: 18025:style essays 18011: 17886: 17869:Advice pages 17816: 17812: 17808: 17804: 17799: 17795: 17657:may be used 17626: 17625: 17607: 17577: 17568: 17564: 17490: 17486: 17484: 17468:autocollapse 17464:mw-collapsed 17457: 17442: 17395: 17375:MOS:DONTHIDE 17368:MOS:COLLAPSE 17313:&thinsp; 17302: 17282:&thinsp; 17277: 17275: 17257: 17091: 17020: 17014: 17008: 16957: 16943:block indent 16938: 16898: 16894:color coding 16878:additionally 16863: 16852: 16825:Color coding 16804: 16782: 16767: 16727: 16709:MOS:EMPHASIS 16688: 16677: 16663:MOS:SIMPLIFY 16628: 16605: 16588: 16559: 16557: 16541: 16540: 16529:only rarely 16504: 16503: 16486: 16485: 16465: 16464: 16434: 16428: 16422: 16416: 16352:Main pages: 16291: 16255: 16240: 16208: 16059: 16052: 16035: 16025: 16020: 16012: 16001: 15991: 15988:Geographical 15987: 15986: 15937: 15917: 15912: 15910: 15883: 15783: 15748: 15726:Proper names 15724: 15701: 15694: 15654: 15650: 15628: 15616: 15612:Wang Yanhong 15598:in English ( 15576:Latin script 15573: 15531:MOS:NOTLATIN 15490: 15481: 15427: 15352: 15330: 15314: 15311:stereotyping 15306: 15304: 15285: 15283:group uses. 15281: 15257:MOS:IDENTITY 15236: 15232: 15228: 15227:). The word 15202: 15198: 15194: 15190: 15188: 15157:Subset terms 15134: 15128: 15120: 15108: 15024: 14988:MOS:QUESTION 14967:MOS:NOTETHAT 14953:MOS:INSTRUCT 14926: 14913: 14848: 14837: 14832: 14824: 14778:MOS:GENDERID 14752: 14746: 14742:contractions 14739: 14712:Contractions 14701: 14686: 14678: 14671: 14662: 14655: 14622: 14595: 14505:refers to a 14502: 14495:are playing 14481: 14464: 14460: 14456: 14452: 14448: 14444: 14440: 14436: 14432: 14428: 14424: 14418: 14412: 14407:three hanifs 14397: 14387: 14383: 14377: 14371: 14369: 14345:MOS:SINGULAR 14232: 14222: 14191: 14187: 14185: 14163:MOS:SOCRATIC 14156:MOS:PEDAGOGY 14100: 14090: 14076: 14072: 14068: 14064: 14060: 14058: 13964: 13933: 13929: 13910: 13886:Plural nouns 13871: 13867: 13863: 13851: 13828:Cortez's men 13815: 13811: 13809: 13711: 13707: 13701: 13697: 13687:sign (as in 13657:Symbols for 13580:Symbols for 13546:hyphen-minus 13532: 13504:DOT OPERATOR 13494:) or a dot ( 13382:metre/second 13362:rather than 12981: 12953: 12909: 12893:Main pages: 12779: 12753:10 June 1921 12749: 12713: 12704:rather than 12694:non-breaking 12663: 12637: 12619: 12575: 12574: 12543: 12518: 12514: 12508: 12504:<ref: --> 12499: 12498: 12478:MOS:REFSPACE 12471:MOS:PUNCTREF 12464:MOS:REFPUNCT 12364: 12331: 12324: 12271:§ Quotations 12236:MOS:FULLSTOP 12165: 12144: 12135: 12131: 12111: 12107: 12025: 11888:Replacement 11883:ASCII Symbol 11859: 11833: 11830:inclusive-or 11815: 11712: 11701: 11678: 11659: 11653: 11604: 11595:to indicate 11590: 11579: 11561:An example: 11560: 11549: 11501:HYPHEN-MINUS 11444: 11433: 11426:MOS:NEGATIVE 11412:Other dashes 11407: 11383: 11360: 11324: 11308: 11288: 11278: 11271:MOS:LISTDASH 11253: 11238: 11145: 11134: 11104: 11060: 11047: 11005: 10985: 10970:Wilkes-Barre 10953: 10827: 10823: 10790: 10767: 10763: 10759: 10755: 10725: 10661: 10657: 10608: 10559: 10555: 10553: 10538: 10520: 10463: 10459: 10429: 10402: 10395: 10388: 10377: 10361: 10329: 10305: 10301: 10297: 10291: 10281: 10273: 10259: 10216: 10206: 10204: 10157: 10146:HYPHEN-MINUS 10139: 10138: 10117:if necessary 10113:soft hyphens 10108: 10107: 10061: 10060: 10042: 10041: 10024: 10023: 10016: 10010: 10004: 9988:Graeco-Roman 9985: 9976: 9972: 9970: 9941: 9940: 9821: 9815: 9757: 9753: 9741: 9716: 9710: 9684: 9651: 9613:(as a noun: 9545:co-operation 9517:sub-basement 9497: 9493: 9485: 9359: 9304: 9302: 9299: 9270: 9239: 9237: 9206: 9204: 9199: 9197: 9141: 9107: 9079: 9057:comma splice 9054: 9023: 8984: 8933: 8921: 8907: 8890: 8831: 8793: 8743: 8728: 8719: 8716: 8699: 8695: 8691: 8687: 8684:Oxford comma 8683: 8680:serial comma 8677: 8473: 8431:MOS:GEOCOMMA 8377: 8361: 8302: 8300: 8085: 8079: 8077: 8056:MOS:ELLIPSES 8049:MOS:ELLIPSIS 8006: 7985: 7976: 7963: 7948: 7928: 7908: 7897: 7885: 7845:To clarify: 7840: 7787: 7783: 7753: 7742: 7636:Oxford "-er" 7631: 7620: 7581: 7566: 7547: 7517: 7494: 7452: 7436: 7409: 7393: 7356: 7293: 7271: 7265: 7259: 7227: 7168: 7153: 7128: 7118: 7108: 7084: 7045: 7041: 7037: 7024: 7011: 7000: 6999: 6992: 6983: 6885: 6868: 6858: 6774: 6770: 6746: 6735: 6647: 6641: 6630: 6624: 6616: 6610: 6602: 6596: 6588: 6582: 6570:MOS:STRAIGHT 6531: 6529: 6371: 6350: 6329: 6308: 6286:first season 6280: 6212: 6153: 6150: 6146: 6090: 6054: 6046: 6041:This gives: 6040: 5983: 5960: 5949: 5938: 5923: 5885: 5848: 5824: 5802: 5777: 5770: 5756:(a case of " 5751: 5743:Unacceptable 5724: 5708: 5699: 5686: 5680: 5676: 5670: 5666: 5660: 5656: 5650: 5523:for details. 5484: 5436: 5432: 5429:weasel words 5422: 5410:Acceptable: 5405: 5388:MOS:QUOTEPOV 5365: 5352: 5349:G-d d--m it! 5330: 5285: 5278:WP:QUOTETYPO 5226: 5204: 5198: 5179: 5116: 5110: 5106: 5102: 5098: 5075: 5060: 5014: 4994: 4991:§ Quotations 4952: 4949:Rosa gallica 4948: 4938: 4934: 4925:Retroviridae 4924: 4919:Panthera leo 4918: 4907: 4879: 4862: 4858: 4853:§ Quotations 4833: 4829: 4822: 4815: 4811: 4795: 4758: 4754: 4747:MOS:NOITALIC 4652: 4641: 4589:<ref: --> 4576: 4562: 4550: 4542: 4540: 4470: 4435: 4406: 4360: 4351: 4329: 4328:To indicate 4327: 4232: 4225: 4212: 4125: 4121: 4119: 4097: 4093: 4087: 4084:Plural forms 4067: 4060: 4052: 4017: 4005: 3998:contractions 3995: 3966:encyclopædia 3958:encyclopedia 3952: 3945: 3938: 3931:MOS:LIGATURE 3897: 3893: 3869: 3865: 3855: 3846: 3842: 3838: 3824: 3819: 3812:Main pages: 3771: 3758: 3746: 3744: 3723: 3719: 3717: 3693: 3689: 3667: 3643:solar system 3642: 3638: 3634: 3630: 3628: 3600: 3582: 3545: 3544: 3524: 3476:bird of prey 3440:plains zebra 3431: 3430: 3423: 3416: 3411: 3405: 3399: 3398: 3393:Retroviridae 3392: 3367:sericophylla 3366: 3362: 3356: 3350: 3344: 3338: 3331: 3329: 3281: 3268:spring fever 3255: 3229: 3208: 3146: 3121: 3112:original sin 3108:virgin birth 3091: 3069: 3040:the Minotaur 3007: 2997: 2936: 2900: 2886: 2856:His Highness 2827: 2809: 2805: 2801: 2797: 2744: 2738: 2728: 2709: 2675: 2669: 2663: 2658: 2640: 2638: 2627: 2601: 2579: 2568: 2557: 2494: 2414:Christchurch 2377: 2331: 2321: 2224: 2169:Proper names 2168: 2158: 2154: 2149: 2105:MOS:DATETIES 2090: 2069: 2065: 2061: 2057: 2047: 2009: 2005: 1993: 1987: 1962: 1948: 1931: 1911:, create an 1906: 1886: 1879: 1857: 1834: 1813: 1737: 1734: 1691:Not contain 1659: 1654: 1650: 1648: 1611: 1596:Help:Section 1579:MOS:SECTIONS 1572:MOS:HEADINGS 1543: 1461: 1455:Article name 1443:Article name 1426: 1415: 1301: 1295: 1279:lead section 1276: 1238: 1227: 1211: 1196: 1175:noun phrases 1163:The Simpsons 1161: 1155: 1139: 1135: 1131: 1111:italic title 1075: 1068: 1025: 1021:any more say 1002: 987: 976: 972: 958:MOS:STYLERET 951:MOS:STYLEVAR 925: 921:Edit warring 914: 910: 902:detail pages 894:style manual 889: 885: 881: 879: 819:WikiProjects 749:Article size 288:Lead section 99: 57: 43: 29: 20132:Attack page 20120:Biographies 19533:Terminology 19453:Mathematics 19401:Philippines 19263:Visual arts 19258:Video games 19022:Hidden text 18765:1 September 18705:is missing. 18586:, repeated 18503:&#8202; 18425:noun phrase 18341:crossbreeds 18218:, changing 17954:Generally: 17905:MOS:ORGNAME 17882:mobile view 17788:Wiki markup 17782:Style guide 17635:quite broad 17620:Main page: 17610:wiki markup 17559:Main page: 17537:MOS:COMMENT 17460:collapsible 17086:|5° 24′ N}} 16958:Do not use 16933:Main page: 16911:Indentation 16829:Main page: 16796:(see below) 16778:style sheet 16734:&Alpha; 16552:Main page: 16542:Check links 16453:Main page: 16286:Main page: 16278:MOS:CAPTION 16199:Other media 16186:An image's 16175:. Consider 16152:==Heading== 16129:Main page: 16096:Media files 16090:Cape Colony 16082:Thabo Mbeki 16066:Alta Mexico 15992:place names 15913:wikilinking 15773:parameter: 15708:; see also 15617:The use of 15600:Tchaikovsky 15596:most common 15430:use italics 15422:Main page: 15391:MOS:FOREIGN 15377:MOS:NON-ENG 15325:Main page: 15237:composed of 15191:subset term 15111:in headings 15051:fourth wall 14981:MOS:PRESUME 14931:; see also 14750:instead of 14734:Main page: 14679:Flappy Bird 14672:Flappy Bird 14567:MOS:COMPNOW 14338:MOS:PLURALS 14316:Shakespeare 14001:MOS:PRONOUN 13762:Possessives 13753:MOS:GRAMMAR 13508:&times; 13477:&minus; 13408:Percentages 13404:Date ranges 13301:. However, 13286:Main page: 13180:Main page: 13027:Main page: 12968:MOS:CURRENT 12966:Main page: 12908:Do not use 12899:MOS:CENTURY 12843:Main page: 12816:Main page: 12744:Main page: 12658:Main page: 12654:Time of day 12632:Main page: 12531:immediately 12130:Her albums 12106:Her albums 12034:number sign 11914:<--: --> 11706:character ( 11582:(see above) 11461:&minus; 11434:Do not use 11088:a 3:1 ratio 10863:a 51–30 win 10662:17September 10266:(See also: 10238:&mdash; 10234:&ndash; 10155:character. 10029:(see above) 9996:Gandhi-Like 9807:MOS:HANGING 9541:cooperation 9525:co-proposed 9486:dress again 9425:eating fish 9190:MOS:HOWEVER 8936:a 3:1 ratio 8814:appositives 8663:MOS:HARVARD 8009:URL-encoded 7953:answered." 7933:answered." 7749:parentheses 7717:MOS:BRACKET 7710:MOS:B&P 7676:"New Order" 7634:comes from 7337:MOS:LOGICAL 7330:MOS:INOROUT 7025:Jabberwocky 7019:Jabberwocky 6780:res publica 6209:Apostrophes 6175:Punctuation 6102:, produces 6092:Pull quotes 5821:Attribution 5765:Permissible 5754:term of art 5693:§ Ampersand 5562:Underlining 5477:MOS:CONFORM 5318:|nolink=y}} 5271:MOS:TYPOFIX 4953:officinalis 4874:Main page: 4783:Main page: 4655:<em: --> 4636:Main page: 4625:Main page: 4417:translation 4365:Do not use 4235:commonality 4220:, although 4170:US and U.S. 4153:(see above) 4045:MOS:1STABBR 4014:initialisms 3984:Main page: 3953:clin d'oeil 3745:Capitalize 3712:Main page: 3617:Main page: 3380:carnivorans 3330:When using 3315:. See also 3222:Main page: 3064:cherub-like 2976:the Messiah 2972:the Prophet 2940:for deities 2867:Main page: 2852:Her Majesty 2790:Main page: 2704:Main page: 2633:Main page: 2596:Main page: 2553:WP:TITLEVAR 2549:WP:PRESERVE 2306:alternating 2302:alternative 2254:ten million 2109:MOS:DATEVAR 2000:. If using 1996:entries in 1716:Not misuse 1418:Vector 2022 1318:, with the 1271:Main page: 1212:John Palmer 1126:Do not use 1063:Main page: 724:Terminology 680:Mathematics 583:Philippines 436:Visual arts 431:Video games 158:Hidden text 58:substantive 20436:User boxes 20431:User pages 20070:Signatures 19946:Harassment 19878:Plagiarism 19846:Notability 19631:User pages 19596:Signatures 19591:Notability 19516:Cue sports 19253:Television 19248:Philosophy 19202:Trademarks 19051:Formatting 18736:2019-09-25 18713:References 18598:, and the 18546:news-style 18520:hair space 18495:hair space 18487:hair space 18381:(clearer). 18224:oldsection 18027:, and the 17956:§ Identity 17794:Knowledge: 17476:JavaScript 17390:See also: 17361:MOS:SCROLL 17337:works but 17309:&nbsp; 17278:thin space 17207:Elm Street 17021:hard space 16999:See also: 16925:MOS:INDENT 16815:absolutely 16807:relatively 16762:See also: 16656:MOS:MARKUP 16521:are often 16499:Apostrophe 16459:See also: 16217:See also: 16203:See also: 16135:See also: 16100:See also: 16070:California 16036:Mount Fuji 15977:See also: 15911:Excessive 15874:See also: 15859:MOS:JARGON 15655:Paul Erdös 15651:Paul Erdos 15643:Paul Erdős 15619:diacritics 15560:See also: 15504:vice versa 15450:|es|casa}} 15399:See also: 15272:See also: 15181:MOS:SUBSET 15161:See also: 15142:(see also 15011:See also: 14933:§ Identity 14794:See also: 14707:Vocabulary 14610:past tense 14582:See also: 14525:Verb tense 14517:including 14445:government 14423:– such as 14353:See also: 14285:|(see ])}} 14259:Click here 14196:(see also 14112:), though 14110:as follows 14044:MOS:PERSON 14009:See also: 13800:Apostrophe 13575:E notation 13536:(typed as 13512:&sdot; 13473:MINUS SIGN 13460:See also: 13176:Currencies 13163:. Markup: 13126:, but not 12998:Incorrect: 12972:See also: 12940:CE and BCE 12895:MOS:DECADE 12845:MOS:SEASON 12798:2005-04-03 12678:11:15 a.m. 12576:Exceptions 12550:References 12517:or simply 12493:See also: 12411:Incorrect: 12385:Acceptable 12373:Incorrect: 12264:§ Ellipses 12250:MOS:PERIOD 12061:Incorrect: 12020:See also: 11991:MOS:NUMERO 11918:<-: --> 11886:Preferred 11866:sourcecode 11720:10 ÷ 2 = 5 11535:MOS:STROKE 11485:MINUS SIGN 11456:MINUS SIGN 11398:hair space 11379:hair space 10547:Bibleverse 10515:See also: 10500:MOS:RANGES 10486:MOS:ENFROM 10197:MOS:ENDASH 10190:MOS:EMDASH 10000:title case 9994:, but not 9964:as simply 9928:12 h shift 9887:Incorrect: 9858:Incorrect: 9845:&nbsp; 9752:, because 9505:subsection 9478:homographs 9352:MOS:HYPHEN 9043:Incorrect: 9012:Incorrect: 8942:Semicolons 8840:Kim Thayil 8656:MOS:OXFORD 8649:MOS:SERIAL 8602:Incorrect: 8549:Incorrect: 8493:Incorrect: 8462:Incorrect: 8371:Incorrect: 8312:Incorrect: 8247:appositive 8241:A pair of 7949:He said, " 7945:answered." 7939:He said, " 7929:He said, " 7925:answered." 7919:He said, " 7868:§ Ellipses 7604:Incorrect: 7558:Incorrect: 7482:Incorrect: 7376:Incorrect: 7351:See also: 7345:See also: 7323:MOS:LQUOTE 7296:title case 7173:scenario: 7051:(See also 6801:|es|casa}} 6721:MOS:SINGLE 6714:MOS:DOUBLE 6524:See also: 6481:Apostrophe 6421:Wade–Giles 6156:in italics 6110:, and may 6061:{{nbsp}}// 6016:blockquote 6004:poem quote 5932:blockquote 5734:Acceptable 5691:(See also 5619:(with the 5584:small caps 5502:or spaced 5433:supposedly 5396:See also: 5288:verifiably 5124:Quotations 5066:Incorrect: 4989:See also: 4928:, but not 4843:Mentioning 4798:mentioning 4773:title case 4769:the Talmud 4354:See also: 4321:See also: 4287:U.S. of A. 4205:MOS:NOTUSA 4092:by adding 4088:Pluralize 4038:MOS:1STOCC 4002:apostrophe 3990:See also: 3974:Aethelstan 3946:clin d'œil 3908:See also: 3790:north-west 3759:Southerner 3740:South Pole 3720:directions 3629:The words 3623:See also: 3488:great apes 3104:Republican 3100:republican 3078:the Exodus 3052:the Furies 2980:the Virgin 2938:Honorifics 2915:the Talmud 2879:See also: 2713:title case 2694:trademarks 2678:band names 2537:See also: 2529:MOS:RETAIN 2384:Afrikaners 2368:See also: 2245:eyeglasses 2237:spectacles 2155:Quotations 2144:See also: 2129:MOS:ARTCON 2038:See also: 2030:MOS:ENGVAR 2010:definition 1959:{{Anchor}} 1769:Early life 1594:See also: 1530:Categories 1471:citations) 1420:skin, the 1343:(see also 1179:Early life 809:User pages 784:Signatures 779:Notability 710:Cue sports 426:Television 421:Philosophy 367:Trademarks 191:Formatting 20443:Shortcuts 20137:Oversight 20085:Deletion 20040:Etiquette 19951:Vandalism 19941:Consensus 19817:Image use 19807:Copyright 19473:Chemicals 19463:Chemistry 19411:Singapore 19391:Macedonia 19366:Indonesia 19027:Infoboxes 19000:Biography 18971:Directory 18695:are from 18552:, versus 18445:year–year 18304:anglicize 18228:redirects 18150:infoboxes 18078:June 2005 17695:Styletips 17661:the IPA. 17572:ownership 17500:infoboxes 17422:footnotes 17353:Shortcuts 17343:doesn't. 17227:Pope Paul 17212:World War 16648:Shortcuts 16509:MediaWiki 16461:Help:Link 16449:Wikilinks 16380:Help:List 16364:Help:List 16329:Shortcuts 16169:galleries 16068:, not in 16028:(German: 15969:MOS:PLACE 15954:Shortcuts 15892:Technical 15749:Nuremberg 15635:ligatures 15624:redirects 15592:romanized 15590:—must be 15516:Shortcuts 15492:Loanwords 15369:Shortcuts 15307:Ethiopian 15249:Shortcuts 15229:including 15195:including 15144:Bulverism 15119:The term 15063:obviously 15059:naturally 15055:of course 15031:note that 14974:MOS:NOTED 14945:Shortcuts 14879:cosmonaut 14875:astronaut 14871:unpiloted 14802:Shortcuts 14756:. Use of 14553:MOS:ISWAS 14539:MOS:TENSE 14531:Shortcuts 14469:incorrect 14330:Shortcuts 14177:WP:NOTYOU 14134:Shortcuts 14099:author's 14022:Shortcuts 13768:Shortcuts 13734:is handy. 13685:factorial 13586:relations 13204:$ 250–300 13040:21million 12936:AD and BC 12929:the 1700s 12925:the 1980s 12825:June 1921 12818:MOS:MONTH 12682:2:30 p.m. 12607:) is the 12601:; Hanja: 12510:footnotes 12442:Shortcuts 12302:Shortcuts 12228:Shortcuts 12005:MOS:POUND 11976:Shortcuts 11881:Composed 11832:to imply 11808:MOS:ANDOR 11704:backslash 11528:MOS:SLASH 11520:Shortcuts 11487:inside a 11349:§ Slashes 11337:§ Hyphens 11156:Shortcuts 11129:Hale–Bopp 11065:§ Slashes 10826:modifies 10731:−10 to 10 10493:MOS:RANGE 10471:Shortcuts 10407:Shortcuts 10175:Shortcuts 10085:Shortcuts 10046:example, 9930:(markup: 9877:(markup: 9792:Shortcuts 9707:northerly 9529:re-target 9509:nonlinear 9498:set right 9149:Confusing 8987:semicolon 8948:Shortcuts 8876:MOS:COLON 8845:Clearer: 8788:But not: 8763:Clearer: 8642:WP:OCOMMA 8634:Shortcuts 8225:MOS:COMMA 8217:Shortcuts 8041:Shortcuts 8025:query=yyy 7724:MOS:PAREN 7702:Shortcuts 7630:The term 7530:cite news 7416:full stop 7308:Shortcuts 7283:Locations 7033:Babe Ruth 6836:Shortcuts 6706:Shortcuts 6658:guillemet 6556:MOS:CURLY 6548:Shortcuts 6532:quotation 6494:Shortcuts 6451:soft sign 6410:See also 6288:(markup: 6217:Shortcuts 6189:MOS:PUNCT 6124:Shortcuts 6068:Shortcuts 6057:{{nbsp}}/ 5901:Shortcuts 5889:hypertext 5863:Shortcuts 5555:§ Italics 5487:facsimile 5437:so-called 5326:basically 5249:Shortcuts 5165:MOS:QUOTE 5150:Shortcuts 5143:MOS:CURLY 5005:See below 4966:Shortcuts 4939:damascena 4810:the term 4765:the Quran 4761:the Bible 4684:Correct: 4674:Correct: 4602:Shortcuts 4585:ligatures 4547:ampersand 4533:MOS:& 4518:Shortcuts 4512:Ampersand 4183:Shortcuts 4126:full stop 4104:. Do not 4030:Shortcuts 3970:Æthelstan 3940:Ligatures 3916:Shortcuts 3904:Ligatures 3782:northwest 3686:Milky way 3682:Milky Way 3585:redirects 3533:ayahuasca 3372:Carnivora 3345:Erithacus 3154:Edwardian 2984:many gods 2923:the Bible 2911:the Quran 2802:president 2686:nicknames 2474:Vancouver 2322:connexion 2298:alternate 2260:one crore 2184:aluminium 2121:Shortcuts 2076:§ Plurals 1790:Languages 1743:Shortcuts 1720:markup (" 1557:Shortcuts 1494:Relevant 1435:, insert 1341:template 1304:templates 1297:Infoboxes 1240:See also 1152:The Hague 1071:balancing 1005:consensus 936:Shortcuts 892:) is the 653:Chemicals 643:Chemistry 593:Singapore 568:Macedonia 548:Indonesia 163:Infoboxes 136:Biography 66:talk page 62:consensus 46:guideline 20683:Category 20448:Subpages 20314:Contents 20283:Hatnotes 20208:Editing 20190:Blocking 19936:Civility 19911:Conduct 19866:Medicine 19757:Content 19679:Category 19606:Subpages 19601:Overview 19581:Hatnotes 19576:Contents 19500:Taxonomy 19458:Medicine 19425:Religion 19396:Pakistan 19386:Malaysia 19324:Regional 19104:Captions 19078:Spelling 18964:Overview 18906:template 18693:nomobile 18588:deletion 18449:this RFC 18337:studbook 18298:romanize 18292:latinize 18203:summary. 17897:Shortcut 17720:Guidance 17665:See also 17643:Help:IPA 17529:Shortcut 17498:. 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Index

MOS:WE
guideline
occasional exceptions
consensus
talk page
Shortcut
WP:MOS
Manual of Style (MoS)
Content
Accessibility
Biography
Disambiguation pages
Organizing by subject
Gender identity
Hidden text
Infoboxes
Linking
Self-references
Words to watch
Formatting
Abbreviations
Capitalization
Dates and numbers
Pronunciation
Spelling
Text formatting
Titles of works
Images
Captions
Image placement

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