IX. SPELLING AND USAGE For answers to other questions of style and spelling, consult the Associated Press Stylebook and Libel Manual, American Heritage Dictionary, or Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary. • acknowledgment and judgment (no e after g) • advisor preferred to adviser • affect: to have an influence on; effect: to bring about • African American is two words. Hyphenate only when used as an adjective. • Alumnus is the singular reference for a male graduate; alumna, the singular reference for a female graduate; alumni, the plural reference to a mixed group of male and female graduates or male graduates only; alumnae, the plural reference for female graduates only. • Use a.m. and p.m. and do not include o’clock. Designate noon or midnight, rather than 12 a.m. or 12 p.m. • Attorney is used only when referring to the representative of a client, otherwise lawyer. • between when referring to two things, among when referring to more than two • capital for the city, capitol for the building • catalog, not catalogue • Omit S.C. in conjunction with Columbia. • coursework, not course work • credit-hour (adjective), credit hour (noun) • database, not data base • disabled, not handicapped • Doctorate is a noun, and doctoral is an adjective. • Fax is not a proper noun nor an acronym and should be used upper and lowercase as appropriate. • freshman (adj.): the freshman enrollment (never the freshmen enrollment) • fund raising (noun), fund-raising (adjective), fund raiser (noun) • grade point average, not grade-point average • high school (noun), high-school (adjective) • in regard to (never in regards to), but, he sends his regards • international students, not foreign students • kickoff (noun or adjective), kick off (verb) • lay (transitive): I lay the book on the bed; past tense: I laid the book on the bed. • lie (intransitive): I lie in bed; past tense: I lay in bed. • less when describing an amount that cannot be counted, fewer when describing a number: • resume as shown here, not résumé or resumé • Statehouse when referring to the S.C. capitol building • theatre when referring to the department, discipline, or a performance; theater when referring to a building (exceptions: Longstreet Theatre, Cottingham Theatre) • workplace, not work place • workstation, not work station Avoid • Passive voice: The dean appointed John Jones; not, John Jones was appointed. • The longer of two similar words: use (not utilize), competence (not competency). • Sexist language: Avoid using he or she where possible, and do not use he/she. Write, “The president and a representative ...” not “The president and his/her representative …” Other avoidance techniques include pluralizing he and she to they, or substituting a common noun. • The split infinitive. • The dangling participle.
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