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Titles (of people). Professional titles. When used in a sentence, professional titles should be uppercase before a person's name and lowercase after. (When a title appears before a person's name, it is seen as part of the name. When it appears after or on its own, it is seen as the name of the job and not the person, so it
Form titles should clearly and quickly explain the purpose of the form. Use title case for form titles and sentence case for form fields. Keep forms as short as possible. Only request information that we need and intend to use. Don't ask for information that could be considered private or personal, including gender. If you need
Comma | 12. Dashes and hyphens | 13. Ellipsis | 15. Full stop, exclamation mark and question mark | 15. Quotation marks | 16. UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD. STYLE GUIDE. 17 Names and titles. General titles | 17. Oxford-specific titles | 17. Other titles | 18. Combining titles | 19. Postnominals | 20. 21 Highlighting/emphasising.
Titles of Works. The rules for formatting in italic, roman, or in quotes are as follows, using headline-style capitalization (See also “Titles of Works—Capitalization"). Italicize titles of: art exhibitions; blog names; books; concerts; law cases; long poems; magazines; movies; newspapers; plays; podcast series; radio shows; record
Minor works (any specifically-titled subdivisions of italicized major works) are given in quotation marks. (See Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Text formatting § When not to use italics for details.) Website titles may or may not be italicized depending on the type of site and what kind of content it features.
Titles. When a male professor has been knighted he becomes Professor Sir Nicholas Shackleton and when a female professor is knighted she becomes Professor Dame Louise Johnson. Once the full name has been given, subsequent mentions in text and quotes should be Sir Nicholas and Dame
General Rules for Titles in References. In general, the title of a work is recorded just as the words appear in the publication. Capitalize only the first word of a book or article title. Capitalize proper nouns, initials, and acronyms in a title. Separate a subtitle with a colon and a space. Capitalize the first letter of the subtitle.
The following rules of capitalization, punctuation, italics, and quotation marks apply ONLY to the use of titles of books, newspapers, magazines, musical and visual works, and other documents. Capitalization. Always capitalize all words in a title except articles (a, an, the), coordinating conjunctions (and, but, for, nor, or, yet,
Titles should be concise, specific, and informative and should contain the key points of the work. For scientific manuscripts, overly general titles are not desirable (but see also , Names of Cities, Counties, States, Provinces, and Countries). (Note: The shorter, more general title might be appropriate for an editorial or an
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