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英语语法一起学

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1#
发表于 6.5.2003 11:25:20 | 只看该作者
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CAPITALIZATIONS AND ABBREVIATIONS <br>  <br>Titles <br>  <br>(a) Nearly all formal titles are capitalized before the name, lowercased <br>after the name. <br>  <br>Example: <br>I voted for Mayor Darwin Hindman. <br>I prefer Councilwoman Colleen Coble. <br>  <br>(<!--emo&B)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/cool.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cool.gif'><!--endemo--> Few titles are abbreviated (e.g., don&#39;t abbreviate detective, <br>prosecuting attorney and president.) <br>  <br>Titles that ARE abbeviated (e.g. such as Gov., Sen., Rev., Dr.) are <br>abbreviated when they come BEFORE the name. <br>  <br>Example: <br>Dr. Jack Kevorkian assisted in the suicide. <br>Gov. Mel Carnahan opposed the bill. <br>  <br>&copy; When the title comes AFTER the name, spell out the title, and do not <br>abbreviate it or capitalize it. <br>  <br>Example: <br>olice arrested Jack Kevorkian, the doctor. <br>The bill was vetoed by Mel Carnahan, the governor. <br>  <br><!--emo&(d)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/martini_shaken.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='martini_shaken.gif'><!--endemo--> When the title stands alone, with no name, spell out the title and DO <br>NOT capitalize it. <br>  <br>Example: <br>I voted for the governor. <br>I trust the councilwoman. <br>  <br><!--emo&(e)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/envelope.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='envelope.gif'><!--endemo--> An EXCEPTION: When a title is used before a name, but there is <br>punctuation (such as a comma) between the title and the name, do not <br>capitalize the title. <br>  <br>  <br>Example: <br>I listened to the prosecuting attorney, Kevin Crane. <br>  <br><!--emo&(F)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/rose.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='rose.gif'><!--endemo--> Long titles go best AFTER the name: <br>  <br>Example <br>(not good)Deputy Undersecretary for Consumer Affairs Maureen Maxwell gave a <br>talk on managing your budget. <br>  <br>GOES MUCH BETTER AS: <br>(good)Maureen Maxwell, deputy undersecretary for consumer affairs, gave a <br>talk on managing your budget. <br>  <br>(g) On legislators _ senators, representatives, etc. _ set off their party <br>affiliation and state (or area) with commas, NOT parentheses. Do not put a <br>period after the party affiliation: <br>  <br>Example: <br>Rep. Kenny Hulshof, R-Mo., said .... <br><br>State Sen. Ken Jacob, D-Columbia, introduced ...  <br>
2#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:25:48 | 只看该作者
Streets and Addresses <br>  <br>(a) Abbreviate only with an exact, numbered address. <br>  <br>Example: <br>  <br> 901 Tenth St. <br> BUT: The gym is on Tenth Street. <br>  <br>(<!--emo&B)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/cool.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cool.gif'><!--endemo--> On exact addresses, if they take a direction at the beginning or end, <br>abbreviate it: <br>  <br>Example: <br>  <br>555 N. Garth Ave. <br>333 W. Broadway <br>  <br>&copy; A the END of the exact address, after the street name, always CAPITALIZE <br>the Road, Street, Terrace, Avenue, etc. BUT ABBREVIATE that last word only <br>in three cases: <br>  <br> Blvd. <br> Ave. <br> St. <br>(This can be remembered as BAS, which is part of a word.) <br>  <br>Example: <br>  <br> 999 Stadium Blvd. <br> 767 Milestone Ave. <br> 545 Hitt St. <br>  <br>ALL THE REST _ Road, Drive, Court, Lane, etc. _ are SPELLED OUT and <br>CAPITALIZED: <br>  <br>Example: <br>  <br> 4444 Providence Road <br> 334 Smiley Lane <br>
3#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:26:07 | 只看该作者
Dates <br>  <br>When months are used with specific dates, such as in obituaries, abbreviate <br>and capitalize the month. Put commas after the day of the week, the month <br>and the year. <br>  <br>Example: <br>  <br>Joe Anders died Monday, Jan. 6, 1997, of cancer. <br>  <br>With no specific date, spell out the month. When you have the month and the <br>year, do not use a comma between them: <br>  <br>Example: <br>  <br>February is chilly. <br>She received her last letter from him in December 1994. <br>  <br><br>EXCEPTION: The &quot;shorter&quot; five months of spring and summer are not <br>abbreviated: <br>March, April, May, June, July. <br>MEMORY TIP: 5 months, and 5 letters or fewer in each.   
4#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:26:25 | 只看该作者
Miscellaneous Capitalizations <br>  <br>(a) Capitalize River or Dam as part of a proper name: <br>  <br>Example: <br> Missouri River <br> Bagnell Dam <br>  <br>BUT, in plurals, do NOT capitalize the river or dam: <br>  <br> Missouri and Mississippi rivers <br>(That same lower-case for plurals applies to counties, streets, etc.) <br> First and 12th streets <br> Boone and Callaway counties <br>  <br>(<!--emo&B)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/cool.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cool.gif'><!--endemo--> Capitalize the specific region: Midwest, East, West Coast, South, etc. <br>  <br>But NOT compass directions: <br><br> They were headed east on Interstate 70. <br>  <br>&copy; Capitalize: Congress, Senate, House, General Assembly and government <br>agencies, including City Council and County Commission. (Later references <br>are <br>lowercase, i.e. council, commission.) Capitalize Party in Republican Party, <br>Democratic Party. <br>  <br><!--emo&(d)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/martini_shaken.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='martini_shaken.gif'><!--endemo--> Capitalize: Branches of the U.S. (not foreign) military -- Army, Navy, <br>Marines, etc. <br>--<br>
5#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:27:52 | 只看该作者
Miscellaneous Abbreviations <br>  <br>(a) Spell out governmental agencies, preferably on first reference, then <br>abbreviate if they are familiar: <br>  <br>Example: <br>Federal Communications Commission. Then FCC (no periods). <br>  <br>FBI and CIA can stand alone anytime. But try to avoid too much alphabet <br>soup. <br>  <br>(<!--emo&B)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/cool.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cool.gif'><!--endemo--> As a noun, United States is spelled out. As an adjective, it can be <br>U.S., as in U.S. spending (with periods, and closed together.) The same <br>is true for U.N., which also takes periods. <br>  <br>&copy; SPELL OUT the names of all of the states when they stand alone. <br>  <br>Example: <br>She parachuted into Colorado. <br>  <br>BUT abbreviate most state names when they are used with a city: <br>Example: <br>She parachuted into Pueblo, Colo. <br>  <br>NOTE: There are eight states that are not abbreviated: The two that are <br>disconnected (Alaska and Hawaii) and the six with short names _ five letters <br>or fewer: Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Ohio, Texas and Utah. <br>  <br>.S. _ Do not use the post office&#39;s two-letter abbreviations, especially <br>with addresses for memorials in obituaries. <br>  <br><!--emo&(e)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/envelope.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='envelope.gif'><!--endemo--> No periods are used with mph, as in 35 mph, nor with mm, as in 35mm. <br>(Note that the 35mm is all run together.) <br>  <br><!--emo&(F)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/rose.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='rose.gif'><!--endemo--> NEVER abbreviate Association, especially as in Assn., for obvious reasons<br>and NEVER abbreviate Department. But, abbreviate Co., and Corp. (at the end <br>of a company&#39;s name) and Inc. Incidentally, NO comma before the Inc. In most<br>cases the Inc. is unnecessary, but use it when it is an important part of <br>the name, such as Time Inc.  <br>
6#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:28:37 | 只看该作者
NUMBERS <br>  <br>(1) In general, SPELL OUT one through nine, use figures for 10 above. <br>EXCEPTIONS: Always use figures for these: <br>  <br>Age: <br> John, 7, ran away. John is 7 years old. <br> The 9-year-old ran away, too. <br>Dimensions: <br> 6 inches by 9 inches <br> 6-foot-5 player <br> He is 6 feet 5. <br>ercentages: <br> 4 percent (NOTE that percent is ONE word.) <br> 1 percent to 5 percent (USE the word &quot;percent&quot; every time.) <br>Time: <br> 6 p.m. (NOT 6:00 p.m., and p.m. is closed up and lowercased.) <br> 8 tonight (p.m. would be redundant) <br><br>Street numbers: 9 Quinton Court <br>Day of the month: Jan. 9, 1997 (not 9th) <br>  <br>LEASE _ never start a sentence with a raw figure. <br>  <br> WRONG: 70 runners straggled in. <br> RIGHT: Seventy runners straggled in. <br>  <br>some style books allow you to start a sentence with a year: <br> 1996 was a watershed. <br> But it&#39;s best to avoid even this. <br>
7#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:29:31 | 只看该作者
Money <br>  <br>(a) Use the dollar sign ... $ $ $ $ <br>  $10 $1,000 $90,000 (not $90 thousand) <br><br>(<!--emo&B)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/cool.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cool.gif'><!--endemo--> Use exact figures up to $1 million. On figures more than $1 million, <br>use:   <br> $ 1 million $2.7 million $6.28 billion <br><br>&copy; Round off, unless an exact figure is required. <br> $9,853,159 can usually become $9.85 million on first reference. <br><br><!--emo&(d)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/martini_shaken.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='martini_shaken.gif'><!--endemo--> With ranges of amounts, don&#39;t say: <br> WRONG: $8 to $10 million <br> RIGHT: $8 million to $10 million <br>  <br>TIP: Because you already have the word dollar &quot;built into&quot; the dollar sign, <br>don&#39;t repeat the word &quot;dollars.&quot;  WRONG: $2.3 million dollars <br> RIGHT: $2.3 million <br>
8#
 楼主| 发表于 6.5.2003 11:30:01 | 只看该作者
MISCELLANEOUS USAGE <br>  <br>(1) Robbery vs. burglary. They are NOT the same, despite the Associate <br>ress&#39;s overboad definition. Robbery means taking by force or threat of<br>force. Burglary is usually for entry, for theft. <br>  <br>(2) Bus vs. buss. With two ss&#39;s, it&#39;s kissing. <br>  <br>(3) Compound modifiers are hyphenated when their meaning would be unclear <br>without the hyphen:  The health-care reform proposal ... <br>BUT, do NOT hyphenate the modifiers that end in&quot;ly&quot;:  The highly motivated <br>student ... <br>  <br>(4) When using quotes, the comma and the period go INSIDE the closed quote: <br>&quot;Chauncy is too insipid,&quot; he said. <br>(5) Nicknames are enclosed in quotes, NOT parentheses: <br>  <br> WRONG: Rick (Nature Boy) Flair <br> RIGHT: Rick &quot;Nature Boy&quot; Flair <br>  <br><!--emo&(6)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/devil_smile.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='devil_smile.gif'><!--endemo--> Put quotes around the titles of movies, plays, books (but not the Bible <br>or reference works), operas, songs, TV programs, speeches and works of art. <br>But NOT around the names of newspapers or magazines. <br>  <br>(7) When using two initials instead of a first name, run the two together: <br>  B.J. Thomas <br>  <br><!--emo&(8)--><img src='https://www.kaiyuan.info/bbs/html/emoticons/musical_note.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='musical_note.gif'><!--endemo--> On Judges. <br>  <br>In most cases the word &quot;court&quot; can be dropped to save a word: <br>  Circuit Judge Frank Conley <br>  <br>BUT, don&#39;t drop the word when the meaning can be misconstrued: <br> Juvenile Court Judge Kim Song Jr., NOT Juvenile Judge Kim Song Jr. <br>  <br>NOTE: There is NO comma between Song and Jr. <br> Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, NOT Supreme Justice Clarence Thomas <br>  <br>(9) Murder is a legal term. Use it only when referring to charges to avoid <br>the implication of guilt. Otherwise, use slaying, killing or homicide. <br>  <br>(10) When referring to a city, as in: the city of Columbia, note that the <br>word &quot;city&quot; is lowercased. <br>  <br>(11) Do not say &quot;about&quot; for exact figures: <br> WRONG: There were about 2,159 jellybeans in the jar. <br> WRONG: The burglary occurred about 3:54 p.m. <br>  <br>DO NOT use &quot;at about&quot; when referring to time. Whenever it&#39;s an estimate, <br>it&#39;s &quot;about&quot; and rounded off. Whenever it&#39;s an exact time, use &quot;at.&quot; <br> It happened about 6 a.m. <br> The concert stated at 9:05 p.m. <br>  <br>(12) If you use percentages (as in polls, etc.), ensure they add up to 100 <br>percent. <br>  <br>(13) A hike is a walk. A pay raise is not a pay hike. It can be a pay <br>increase, a pay boost, a pay raise, or just a raise. <br>  <br>(14) Professor is never abbreviated. Ensure that the rank is correct, i.e. <br>professor, assistant professor, associate professor: <br>  <br><br> WRONG: Prof. George Kennedy <br> RIGHT: Professor George Kennedy  <br>
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