8 – Quick and Dirty Style Guide
8 – Quick and Dirty Style Guide
- Why Should I Care?
Here are a few short notes on what I expect in your papers.
Paragraph Formats:
- One argument per paragraph
- 2-4 paragraphs per page (rule of thumb)
- Indent first line
- Margins Justified / Times New Roman / Garamond / 12 pt.
- Double-spaced throughout, no extra spaces between paragraphs.
References:
Paraphrase:
- A paraphrase is a passage you have reworded, and are not quoting literally.
- No quotation marks because you changed the words.
- You still need to reference (Author, YYYY).
Short Quotes:
- Use quotation marks “ ” when reusing the exact words of someone else.
- If you change the words, you CANNOT quote. You must paraphrase.
- Try to quote the strongest words, the most telling images.
- Keep quotes short (10 words or less).
- Use APA style citation technique for attribution of the quote. INCLUDE PAGE NUMBER.
- Ex: “It’s the economy, stupid”, said Bill Clinton (Tillsdale, 1996, p. 46).
- If there is a quote inside a quote, use the “ ” first, and ‘ ’ inside.
- Make sure to clearly state, in the subsequent sentence, who is quoting who.
Long quotes:
- If you must quote long, use the bloc citation style for quotes longer than 40 words.
- No quotation marks. No indent on first line. No italic. Tab the whole bloc, on the left side. Double-space. Justify margins. Ex:
… Some literature, such as Ramsay’s epic novel Brain Rain (2011), is particularly gripping:
The weather was fine, until it started to rain. Then we were wet, cold, miserable, and thinking too much. We needed to move. But to where? We did not know where we were. So what to do? The loudest of the bunch decided to look for wood, so we could start a fire. But no one had a match, or a clue (p. 35).
Person Names:
- When discussing a person, always use the long form at first occasion, including initials.
- (Ex: George W. Bush)
- You can then use the short form (last name only, no Mr.), in subsequent occasions
- When citing an academic source, use last name only, at all times.
- (Ex: According to Smith, the more you write, the better you write.)
Organisation Names:
- Use the full long legal form at first occurrence.
- Organisations: full legal name including acronym in parenthesis
- Ex: The Assembly of First Nations of Canada (AFN)
- Companies: use long legal form first, including Ltd, LP, Pty, Corp, or Inc.
- Ex: Ford Motors, Corp.
- You can then use the short form (AFN, Ford), in subsequent sentences.
Numbers:
- Ten and under, use the word
- 11 and over, use numerical digits
- Units are expressed in words (14 dollars, three litres, 15 percent)
- 1,000 and over, use a comma for every three digits
- Rule of thumb: Reduce to three digits or less, if appropriate.
- Ex: 1,567,764 dollars becomes 1.57 million dollars.
- Ex: 0.76254 US-CA exchange rate becomes 76 cents US.
Italics:
- Quotes are not in italics
- Can be used freely in text to emphasize popular expressions such as hip-hop, bling, etc. It may also be used for words from other languages such as dépanneurs, chaebols, maquiladoras, favelas, etc.
- Bibliography: Title of work or Academic Journal
Bold:
- Never use bold
- One exception: Section (Chapter) titles
Underlined:
- Never use underlined
Semi-colon:
- Never use the semi-colon
- If you have to use it, keep the whole thing short.
- There have to be two complete sentences on each side of the semi-colon.
- It’s an invitation for long, and/or run-on sentences.
- Never use it.
Parenthesis or Round Brackets:
- Never use a parenthesis
- Unless it’s for an APA citation or an acronym.
- Use a footnote for extra information.
Apostrophes:
- Never use an apostrophe for contractions
- Ex: Isn’t. Please write “is not”.
- Be careful using apostrophes with names
- Ex: “Ramsay’s Style Guide is really useful”.
- Not: Ramsays’
Chapter Formats:
- Page Break between Chapters (or Sections)
- Short Subtitle for each Chapter (Chapter 1 – History)
- Use the automatic formats (HOME – Heading 1)
Table of Contents:
- Don’t do it manually.
- Format your section titles using Heading 1 (or 2)
- Use Table of Contents tool in MS Word. (References – Table of Contents)
- To update: right-click Table of Contents – update entire table
Pagination:
- Don’t do it manually.
- Use the pagination tool in MS Word.
(INSERT – Page Number)
Headers:
- APA specifies a page header, even on the cover page. But it is not necessary for student papers.
- If you must, don’t do it manually.
- Use header tool in MS Word. (INSERT > Header)
- If you want both headers and pagination, use only the headers tool (it does both).
Latin-Style Citations
- The paper is not using MLA, or APA, citation styles. You may be tempted to use the traditional Latin style of citations, which uses footnotes. Always use italic for the Latin words.
- id est (e.) – Used in the text to explain a quote.
- Replaces the following expressions: This means, In other words, Which means
- Footnotes - The citation is replaced by a superscript number in the text. The first occurrence of a source is fully referenced, in the associated footnote, including the author, date, title, and publisher. The following Latin expressions are used in subsequent citations.
- ibidem (ibid.) – This is used to repeat a cited document (author-date), when continuing to cite from the same source in the same paragraph.
- idem – This is used to repeat an exact citation, including the page number.
- Bibliography – Your reference entry may use Latin expressions.
- Sine anno (s.a.) – no year of publication is mentioned on the document.
- Et alii (et. al.) – and other authors (when more than 3 authors, depending on style guide).
- id est (e.) – Used in the text to explain a quote.
Ex.
The way Ramsay[1] discusses quotes is impressive. There are never any boring passages, although the material is very dry[2]. Long quotes, short quotes, even Latin style quotes… The Ramsay style guide really helps me write a better paper, and save time. “If you must quote long, use the bloc citation style”[3], i.e. you should not quote long passages, but when you do, you should do it right.