The Economist Style Guide Ebook 12
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Online Style Guides(and scroll down for or click: Pronunciation guides)Many of us end up with both print and online versions of our most-used style guides (especially CMOS). The online version is good for instant access and for larger font. The print edition is often preferable when you want to read something at length or want to flip back and forth.
Diversity style and media guides(usage as to ability/disability, age, appearance, color, ethnicity/nationality, gender/sexuality, health, and bias)Diversity style guidesGender identity (LGBTQIA)DisabilitiesDrug abuse, mental health, and suicide preventionBias Busters: guides to cultural competenceDiversity style & media guides"If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head.
Booklets are small page spreads like the size most of your novels come in. Fold the top of an A4 page down, and you get the rough size of what a booklet is. When form factor is a concern, user guides for consumer devices like Black Berries (smart phones), notebooks, mobile music players, are now often coming in smaller, easy to transport, handy booklet forms.
Of course there are other style guides you could also consider, like the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association or the Diversity Style Guide. It matters less which one you chose, and more that you consistently uphold those standards across all enterprise content.
The terms "a.m." and "p.m." are abbreviations of the Latin ante meridiem (before midday) and post meridiem (after midday). Depending on the style guide referenced, the abbreviations "a.m." and "p.m." are variously written in small capitals (".mw-parser-output span.smallcaps{font-variant:small-caps}.mw-parser-output span.smallcaps-smaller{font-size:85%}am" and "pm"),[citation needed] uppercase letters without a period ("AM" and "PM"), uppercase letters with periods, or lowercase letters ("am" and "pm" or,[13] "a.m." and "p.m.").[citation needed] With the advent of computer generated and printed schedules, especially airlines, advertising, and television promotions, the "M" character is often omitted as providing no additional information as in "9:30A" or "10:00P".[14]
Some style guides suggest the use of a space between the number and the a.m. or p.m. abbreviation.[citation needed] Style guides recommend not using a.m. and p.m. without a time preceding it.[15]
Many U.S. style guides, and NIST's "Frequently asked questions (FAQ)" web page,[2] recommend that it is clearest if one refers to "noon" or "12:00 noon" and "midnight" or "12:00 midnight" (rather than to "12:00 p.m." and "12:00 a.m."). The NIST website states that "12 a.m. and 12 p.m. are ambiguous and should not be used."
Likewise, some U.S. style guides recommend either clarifying "midnight" with other context clues, such as specifying the two dates between which it falls, or not referring to the term at all. For an example of the latter method, "midnight" is replaced with "11:59 p.m." for the end of a day or "12:01 a.m." for the start of a day. That has become common in the United States in legal contracts and for airplane, bus, or train schedules, though some schedules use other conventions. Occasionally, when trains run at regular intervals, the pattern may be broken at midnight by displacing the midnight departure one or more minutes, such as to 11:59 p.m. or 12:01 a.m.[34] 2b1af7f3a8