Parentheses
Use parentheses sparingly. Don't enclose entire sentences in
parentheses.
Parentheses can be used for enumeration within the text as
follows:
(1) carbohydrates, (2) fat, (3) protein, (4) vitamins
For enumeration with periods, see also Numbers.
Parentheses sometimes enclose brief explanatory abbreviations.
McKenzie Hall (formerly the Law Center) houses offices
for the College of Arts and Sciences.
The writing requirement for a bachelor's degree is College
Composition I (WR 121) and either College Composition II
or III (WR 122 or 123).
Quotation Marks
Use double quotation marks before and after direct quotations
as well as titles of interviews, personal correspondence,
short poems and plays, short musical compositions, speeches,
individual television or radio programs, and other unpublished
writing.
Chapter II is entitled "Branching Out."
The poem is called "If."
"Freedom of the Free Press" was the title of
her lecture.
Use single quotation marks for quotations within quotations.
I said, "You must know who shouted, 'Eureka! I've
found it!'"
Put a period or comma inside the ending quotation mark.
Professor Ogard will speak on "China in Transition."
Caldwell's lecture, "Death and Life in American Law,"
is at 7:30 p.m. in 129 McKenzie Hall.
Put an exclamation point, question mark, or semicolon inside
the ending quotation mark only if it's part of the quotation.
Put an exclamation point, question mark, or semicolon outside
the ending quotation mark if it isn't part of the quotation.
Don't use quotation marks after the word so-called. It's
redundant.
Use quotation marks around unusual, technical, ironic, or
slang words or phrases not accompanied by a word calling attention
to them. Use this device sparingly.
Solidus (Slash)
The solidus is overused and frequently ambiguous. Slash-happy
writers use a series of solidus-separated words to be all
encompassing when they can't or won't clarify their message.
Too often, the relationship between the items joined by a
solidus is unclear. Does it mean and, either . . . or, or
does it simply link two closely related words? If you can't
define what the solidus means, you shouldn't be using it.
If you can define it, use words instead of the solidus so
that the reader will understand too.
Chicana or Chicano (not Chicana/Chicano or Chicana/o)
faculty or staff member (not faculty/staff)
Use a hyphen instead of a solidus to link two words.
If space limitations make it necessary to use a solidus,
explain clearly what it means.
Courses numbered 4XX/5XX are for seniors and graduate students,
respectively. Although undergraduates and graduates share
the same classroom, graduate students are required to do
more work, are evaluated according to a tougher grading
standard, or both.
Use the solidus with a space on either side to separate two
lines of poetry quoted in the text.
In Song of the Open Road, Ogden Nash wrote, "I
think that I shall never see / A billboard lovely as a tree."
Use the solidus in pass/no pass only and in P/N
only (not P/NP).
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