III. ABBREVIATIONS

A. When in doubt, spell the word out.

B. Abbreviate

1) Page to p. and pages to pp. in footnotes or bibliographical material; spell out when used in text material.

2) Eastern Daylight Time as EDT, without periods.

3) Use the ampersand (&) only in corporate names or if space demands it in course abbreviations.

4) Complimentary titles, such as Mr., Mrs., and Dr., but do not use them in combination with any other title or with abbreviations indicating scholastic or academic degrees.

            Michael C. Broome, Ph.D., not Dr. Michael C. Broome, Ph.D.
            Bradley P. Presnal, M.D., or Michael D. Mains, D.V.M.,
            not Dr. Bradley P. Presnal, M.D., or Dr. Michael D. Mains, D.V.M.

5) The degrees Bachelor of Science, Master of Science, Master of Arts, Doctor of Philosophy, Bachelor of Fine Arts, Bachelor of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Associate in Science to BS, MS, MA, Ph.D., BFA, BAIS, AS. Except for Ph.D. and similar compound abbreviations, all degree abbreviations should be without periods, according to the Chicago Manual of Style. The preference of The Associated Stylebook and Libel Manual is periods with all degree abbreviations.

6) Use GPA in caps without periods. The term GPR is no longer used.

7) When it is necessary to use a subject-matter designation and course number to identify a specific course, e.g., ENGL 101 Composition, use the official course code.

8) When names of universities, government agencies, or other organizations are abbreviated as acronyms (first letter of each word), use full caps with no periods: MUSC (not M.U.S.C.), ROTC, MIT.

9) Use a.m. and p.m. with periods and lowercase letters. In tabular matter, the periods can be omitted to save space.

10) Use U.S. in text only as an adjective. Spell out United States as a noun, e.g., the U.S. Senate, but a resident of the United States.

11) Abbreviate these months when they are used with a specific date: January, February, August, September, October, November, and December.

C. Do not abbreviate

1) Names of countries other than USA.

2) Given names, such as George, William, and Charles.

3) In lists or bibliographies, use traditional abbreviations, not postal abbreviations, e.g., Boston, Mass., not Boston, MA. In other text, abbreviate the name of the state when it is used with a city, except Alaska, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Ohio, Texas, and Utah. Spell out the state’s name when it is used alone. Use the two-letter postal abbreviation with a zip code only in addresses. Do not use the postal abbreviation in running text.

4) The words association, avenue, boulevard, department, institute, street, etc.

5) Spell out March, April, May, June, and July in all references.

6) Christmas in the form of Xmas.

7) The name of an organization the first time it is used; spell out and put the acronym in parentheses. If the term appears only once, do not add the acronym.

            Center for Engaged Learning (CEL); thereafter, CEL.

8) The word percent: In general spell out the word percent, but in scientific, technical, or statistical copy use the symbol %.

9) Parts of geographic names, except Saint in St. Louis, St. Paul, etc., unless they are used in tabular matter.

            Fort Wayne, North Dakota

10) Assistant and associate when used in a title.

            assistant professor of biology

11) Names of buildings in running text.

            Room 109 Cottingham Theatre, not 109 CT

Note: Abbreviations may be used more freely in tabular matter.