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Style Guide Framework Registration Style Guide To assist in the writing of unit standards, qualifications, and associated reports and documents -1- Style Guide Owner: Framework Registration Created: 2 July 2004 Created by: Editors First published: 16 September 2004 Template: smart.dot -2- Style Guide TABLE OF CONTENTS COMPOUND WORDS .................................................................................. 11 HOUSE STYLE FORMATTING .................................................................... 15 Formatting guides................................................................................... 15 Style ....................................................................................................... 15 Layout .................................................................................................... 16 ALPHA INDEX .............................................................................................. 17 A ................................................................................................................ 17 A or an.................................................................................................... 17 Abbreviations.......................................................................................... 17 Able ........................................................................................................ 17 Absorb.................................................................................................... 18 Accentuate ............................................................................................. 18 Acoustics................................................................................................ 18 Acronyms with a or an............................................................................ 18 Act .......................................................................................................... 18 Action ..................................................................................................... 19 Action verbs............................................................................................ 19 Active voice ............................................................................................ 19 Actually................................................................................................... 19 Adequate................................................................................................ 19 Adherence or adhesion .......................................................................... 20 Adjectives and adverbs .......................................................................... 20 Adopted or adoptive ............................................................................... 20 Advance, advanced, advancement ........................................................ 20 Adverse or averse .................................................................................. 21 Advice or advise ..................................................................................... 21 Affect or effect ........................................................................................ 21 Affinity .................................................................................................... 21 Agree to or agree with ............................................................................ 22 -3- Style Guide Agreement.............................................................................................. 22 Alignment ............................................................................................... 22 Also ........................................................................................................ 23 Alternate or alternative ........................................................................... 23 Ambiguity ............................................................................................... 23 American spellings ................................................................................. 24 Among or between ................................................................................. 24 And/or..................................................................................................... 24 Antecedent ............................................................................................. 24 Anticipate ............................................................................................... 25 Any way, shape, or form......................................................................... 25 Apostrophe............................................................................................. 25 Appendices or appendixes ..................................................................... 26 Apposition .............................................................................................. 26 Articles ................................................................................................... 26 Assist...................................................................................................... 26 Assure, ensure, insure ........................................................................... 27 As or like ................................................................................................ 27 As yet ..................................................................................................... 27 At the present time, at this point in time ................................................. 27 Attributive nouns..................................................................................... 27 Audience ................................................................................................ 28 Averse or adverse .................................................................................. 28 B ................................................................................................................ 29 Bacteria .................................................................................................. 29 Basically ................................................................................................. 29 Basis ...................................................................................................... 29 Because of or due to .............................................................................. 29 Begs the question................................................................................... 30 Being that …........................................................................................... 30 Between or among ................................................................................. 30 Beverage ................................................................................................ 30 Biannual or biennial................................................................................ 30 Bill .......................................................................................................... 31 Block quotations ..................................................................................... 31 Blueprint ................................................................................................. 31 Boldface ................................................................................................. 31 Brackets ................................................................................................. 32 Bullet points............................................................................................ 32 C ................................................................................................................ 33 Capable.................................................................................................. 33 Capitalisation.......................................................................................... 33 Centralised ............................................................................................. 34 Citation ................................................................................................... 34 Clarity ..................................................................................................... 35 Coherence or Cohesion ......................................................................... 35 -4- Style Guide Colon...................................................................................................... 35 Commas................................................................................................. 35 Comma splices....................................................................................... 36 Compare to or compare with .................................................................. 36 Complement or compliment.................................................................... 36 Compound words ................................................................................... 37 Comprise................................................................................................ 38 Concise Oxford....................................................................................... 38 Conjunctions........................................................................................... 38 Considered as, considered to be............................................................ 39 Continual or continuous.......................................................................... 39 Contractions ........................................................................................... 39 Criteria.................................................................................................... 39 Currently................................................................................................. 39 D ................................................................................................................ 41 Dangling participle.................................................................................. 41 Dash....................................................................................................... 41 Data........................................................................................................ 42 Dates...................................................................................................... 42 Decimate ................................................................................................ 42 Definite articles....................................................................................... 42 Definitions .............................................................................................. 42 Denotation and connotation ................................................................... 43 Diction .................................................................................................... 43 Dictionaries............................................................................................. 43 Different.................................................................................................. 44 Disinterested or uninterested ................................................................. 44 Discreet or discrete ................................................................................ 44 Double negatives.................................................................................... 44 Doubt...................................................................................................... 45 Due to or because of .............................................................................. 45 E ................................................................................................................ 47 E-citation ................................................................................................ 47 Each ....................................................................................................... 47 Economy ................................................................................................ 47 Editorial Board........................................................................................ 48 Effect or affect ........................................................................................ 48 Eg or ie................................................................................................... 48 Ellipses................................................................................................... 48 Enactment .............................................................................................. 49 Enquire or inquire ................................................................................... 49 Equally as .............................................................................................. 49 Essentially .............................................................................................. 49 Every ...................................................................................................... 50 Exists...................................................................................................... 50 Extracts .................................................................................................. 50 -5- Style Guide F................................................................................................................. 51 The fact that …....................................................................................... 51 Farther or further .................................................................................... 51 Fewer or less.......................................................................................... 51 Finalise................................................................................................... 51 First, secondly, thirdly............................................................................. 51 First person ............................................................................................ 52 Focus ..................................................................................................... 52 Fonts ...................................................................................................... 52 Forceful or forcible.................................................................................. 52 Foreign words and phrases.................................................................... 53 Fortuitous ............................................................................................... 53 Functionality ........................................................................................... 53 G ................................................................................................................ 55 Generalisations ...................................................................................... 55 Gerund ................................................................................................... 55 Grammar ................................................................................................ 55 Grammar check...................................................................................... 55 H ................................................................................................................ 57 Half......................................................................................................... 57 Hopefully ................................................................................................ 57 House style ............................................................................................ 57 Hyphen................................................................................................... 58 I.................................................................................................................. 59 Ie or eg ................................................................................................... 59 Impact .................................................................................................... 59 Imperative .............................................................................................. 59 Imply or infer........................................................................................... 59 Indefinite articles .................................................................................... 60 Indicative ................................................................................................ 60 Individual ................................................................................................ 60 Infinitive .................................................................................................. 60 Intransitive Verbs.................................................................................... 60 Irony ....................................................................................................... 60 ―ise ....................................................................................................... 61 Italics ...................................................................................................... 61 It’s or its.................................................................................................. 61 J ................................................................................................................. 63 Jargon .................................................................................................... 63 Judgement or judgment.......................................................................... 63 Justification ............................................................................................ 63 K ................................................................................................................ 65 Ker-plunk................................................................................................ 65 L................................................................................................................. 67 Language ............................................................................................... 67 Lead or led ............................................................................................. 67 -6- Style Guide Legislation .............................................................................................. 67 Less or fewer.......................................................................................... 68 Licence or license................................................................................... 68 Like or as................................................................................................ 68 Listing..................................................................................................... 68 Lists........................................................................................................ 68 Literally................................................................................................... 69 Long words............................................................................................. 69 M................................................................................................................ 71 Macrons ................................................................................................. 71 Māori words and phrases ....................................................................... 71 Media ..................................................................................................... 71 Methodology........................................................................................... 71 Militate or mitigate .................................................................................. 71 Modifier .................................................................................................. 72 N ................................................................................................................ 74 Necessitate ............................................................................................ 74 Network .................................................................................................. 74 Never and always................................................................................... 74 Non-discriminatory language.................................................................. 75 None....................................................................................................... 75 Nor ......................................................................................................... 75 Not un— ................................................................................................. 75 Noun....................................................................................................... 75 Numbers................................................................................................. 76 O ................................................................................................................ 78 Obfuscation ............................................................................................ 78 Oblique................................................................................................... 78 On a ... basis .......................................................................................... 79 Only........................................................................................................ 79 Oxford comma........................................................................................ 79 Oxford English Dictionary ....................................................................... 79 P ................................................................................................................ 80 Paragraphs............................................................................................. 80 Participles............................................................................................... 80 Particular ................................................................................................ 80 Passive voice ......................................................................................... 81 Per.......................................................................................................... 81 Per se..................................................................................................... 81 Person.................................................................................................... 81 Personalise ............................................................................................ 81 Plus ........................................................................................................ 82 Practice or practise................................................................................. 82 Precision ................................................................................................ 82 Prepositions at the end........................................................................... 82 Prescriptive and descriptive ................................................................... 83 -7- Style Guide Prior to.................................................................................................... 83 Programme or program .......................................................................... 83 Proofreading........................................................................................... 83 Pronoun.................................................................................................. 83 Punctuation ............................................................................................ 84 Q ................................................................................................................ 86 Quality .................................................................................................... 86 Quotation or quote.................................................................................. 86 Quotation marks ..................................................................................... 86 R ................................................................................................................ 88 Re........................................................................................................... 88 Referencing enactments ........................................................................ 88 Regulations ............................................................................................ 89 Relative pronouns .................................................................................. 89 Rules ...................................................................................................... 90 Run-on sentences .................................................................................. 90 S ................................................................................................................ 92 Second person ....................................................................................... 92 Semicolon .............................................................................................. 92 Sentence fragments ............................................................................... 92 Sentence structure ................................................................................. 93 Sexist language...................................................................................... 93 Shall or will ............................................................................................. 94 Sic .......................................................................................................... 94 Slash ...................................................................................................... 94 So........................................................................................................... 94 Solidus ................................................................................................... 95 Spell check............................................................................................. 95 Split infinitive .......................................................................................... 95 Square brackets ..................................................................................... 96 Subjunctives ........................................................................................... 96 Suspended compounds.......................................................................... 96 T................................................................................................................. 98 That or which.......................................................................................... 98 The ......................................................................................................... 98 Third person ........................................................................................... 98 Titles....................................................................................................... 99 Titles of works ........................................................................................ 99 Totally..................................................................................................... 99 Transitive and intransitive verbs ............................................................. 99 Try and ... ............................................................................................... 99 U .............................................................................................................. 100 Underline.............................................................................................. 100 Unique.................................................................................................. 100 Uninterested or disinterested ............................................................... 100 Usage................................................................................................... 100 -8- Style Guide Utilise and utilisation............................................................................. 100 V .............................................................................................................. 102 Verbal................................................................................................... 102 Versus .................................................................................................. 102 Via ........................................................................................................ 103 Vocabulary ........................................................................................... 103 Voice .................................................................................................... 103 W ............................................................................................................. 104 Which or that ........................................................................................ 104 Who or whom ....................................................................................... 104 -9- Style Guide - 10 - Style Guide COMPOUND WORDS A compound noun used as an adjective is often hyphenated: ‘a cross-bred cat’. In general, if the two words constitute a concept then a hyphen will express the partnership clearly. by-catch by-product bylaw 3-year: a BA is usually a 3-year degree. A-frame: big ‘A’ or you miss the point able-bodied alternating current (a.c.) action-packed (adj) after-hours afterlife aide-mémoire (pl = aides-mémoire) air-conditioning aircrew alphanumeric answering machine antenatal antisocial Attorney-General (pl = AttorneysGeneral) carcass: preferred spelling (not carcase); pl = carcasses catch-all CD-Rom change over cheese-maker childcare child-centred childlike change-over (adj): change-over techniques change over (n): change over is demonstrated clean up (v): I told her to clean up her room clean-up (n): the clean-up took all night common sense (n): I leave it to your common sense commonsense (adj): it’s best to apply commonsense rules company-supplied: we will issue you with company-supplied clothing cool store: a place to get cool things coolstore: a place to keep things cool coordinate cost/benefit analysis cross-match cross-section backbone back-breaking back-to-back ball-bearing bell-ringer bird’s-eye view binomial biochemistry blaster coating blood pressure bookbinder bottle-washer box-and-whisker graphs break-in brick-built brickwork business-to-business - 11 - Style Guide high voltage home-based home-centred hydroladder database daughter-in-law decision-making (n) direct current (d.c.) dispatch: use in preference to despatch downsize down time downplay I-beam: big ‘I’ or you miss the point in-depth industry-based in-feed in situ infrastructure Internet interrelated intramural electromotive force (EMF) email English-speaking person explosion-proof extraordinary ex-wife jack-in-the-box keyboard kilometres per hour (km/h) feedback (n) fire fighting fire-fighting (adj): use of fire-fighting equipment is demonstrated. firefly fireproof fireproofing first-rate accommodations fixed wired flameproof floorcovering follow up (v) follow-up (n) football four-wheel drive full moon lifelike light year log on (v): computer – use log on rather than log in log-on (adj): my log-on identification number macroeconomics mail merge (n): the document is checked for presentation and correct mail merge. mail-merge (v): letters are mailmerged using database data. makeup: cosmetics make up: invention mark up (v): drawings are marked up accordingly mark-up (n): the mark-up on the drawings is completed mass-produced master-at-arms mayor-elect metaphysical microeconomics middle class midtown give-away (freebie) grandmother great-aunt growth-limiting half-sister hand-held hand over (v) handover (n, adj) hand tool hard drive high-level officials - 12 - Style Guide random access memory (RAM) real estate redhead reinsert retest reunify role-play roll over (v): what the dog does rollover (n) role-specific root-mean-square (RMS) rootball run-off (n): the run-off from the toxic spill … run off (v): her husband had run off with the milkman … multicultural multiple-earthed neutral (MEN) nameplate non-compliance non-incendiary non-notifiable non-sparking non-verbal non-violent notebook notetaker off-job off-shore off-site old-fashioned one-to-one one-week vacation ongoing online on-job on site (prep, n): are able to install pre-cast concrete units on site. If you can put a ‘the’ between ‘on’ and ‘site’ it’s two words. on-site (adj): techniques for on-site group activities are described out-feed overanxious overrate overreach over-the-counter salesperson second-best second-class (adj & adv) second class (n) second-degree (adj) second-hand (adj & adv): used goods second hand (n): analogue watch secretary-treasurer self-development semi-automatic semiconductor set-up (n) set up (v) seven-a-side short-term shutdown six-pack six-year-old slip-free socioeconomic softball standalone start up (v): to start up the mower start-up (adj): a start-up operation stem-and-leaf graphs stem-and-leaf plots stockbroker stockman (sexist): stock-handler para-professional PO Box polyvinyl chloride (PVC) Post Office postwar preconference preheat: but pre-warmed prepayments printed circuit board (PCB) post-production - 13 - Style Guide underwater unnatural up-dated up-skill up-to-the-minute up to date (adj): the report was up to date; the report was amended to bring it up to date up-to-date (attrib): the up-to-date report was handed to Deirdre. sub-circuits sub-contract sub-contractor/s sub-floor sub-field sub-mains sub-soil sub-standard sun-safe super tanker: a jolly ship supertanker: a jolly big ship V-formation: big ‘V’ vice-president team work: work that’s piling up in the team’s in-tray teamwork: how we work together threefold time-based time-frame time-line transatlantic troubleshooting T-square: big ‘T’ or you miss the point turn-taking two-way wall-frame website weigh up well-being well-made clothes work-based workflow workplace worksite world-class worldwide inflation X-ray: big ‘X’ underdeveloped - 14 - Style Guide HOUSE STYLE FORMATTING Formatting guides The following formatting guides should be used alongside the appropriate templates: Formatting guide for unit standards: www.nzqa.govt.nz/framework/standard/registration/docs/formatting-us.doc Formatting guide for qualifications: www.nzqa.govt.nz/framework/standard/registration/docs/formatting-quals.doc Style Fonts – Arial 12 pt. Titles – The font size for titles is normally set 2 points greater than the text above which it appears. Capitals should be used sparingly. Titles for unit standards, elements and performance criteria must appear as specified in the Formatting Guides. Italics – Use italics for book titles, for foreign words, and for emphasis. There is no need to use underscore for emphasis. - 15 - Style Guide Layout Justification – Left-hand justify. Paragraphs – New paragraphs should be indicated by using the skip-a-line rule. Bullet points – The default for bullet points should be set to the basic round solid point. Use lower case letters and dashes rather than proper sentence punctuation • given that bullet points are used heavily in our documents, the Editorial Board recommends that all items with bullet points use lower case letters and dashes instead of more formal punctuation - this is easier on the eye • lists will usually require a full stop at the end of the final point. If using bullet points as a general tool to separate tasks or ideas, each bullet point should contain a complete sentence and normal rules of punctuation (including capital letters and full stops) apply. When the document is very formal, lists should commence in lower case: • the list should be introduced by a colon; • semicolons should be used at the end of each list item; • bullet points should be set flush with the paragraph above to show the relationship; • the penultimate listing should have an ‘and’ after the semicolon; and • the last listing should finish with a full stop. Lists – The standard hierarchy for numbered lists is: (1) (a) (i) (A) - 16 - Style Guide ALPHA INDEX A A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W A or an Use an in place of a when it precedes a vowel sound, not just a vowel. That means it’s ‘an umbrella’ (because you say uhm brel luh), but ‘a uniform’ (because it’s pronounced yoo nee form). Remember, particularly with acronyms and other abbreviations, that it’s the sound that matters: it’s ‘an MRI’, assuming you pronounce it ‘em ar eye.’ Abbreviations The first time a term is introduced in text it should be written in full with its abbreviation following in parentheses: ‘Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is a machine used by ...’. Subsequent references to the term should be made to the abbreviated form: ‘MRI uses magnetic fields, radio waves ...’. Abbreviations should always be in upper case and, if the abbreviation is a plural, it should be followed by a lower case s: MRIs. Some terms, such as University Bursaries and examinations, should never be abbreviated. Able Able relates to ability or skill and should only be used in relation to animate beings. Use can when referring to inanimate objects: ‘the ferry can dock at the pier’, not, ‘the ferry is able to dock at the pier’. - 17 - Style Guide Absorb Absorb, in the sense of holding someone’s attention, should only be used in the passive voice followed by in: ‘she was so absorbed in her work …’. Not: ‘her work absorbed her so much …’. Accentuate Accentuate means to emphasise something or make it prominent – not to increase it. When you accentuate the positive, you are making a point of it. Acoustics In the sense of physical properties, acoustics takes the plural: ‘the acoustics in my shower are great for showcasing my singing prowess’. In the sense of the science or study of acoustics, it takes the singular: ‘acoustics is an important part of building design’. Acronyms with a or an See A or An (p. 17). Act In the sense of a piece of legislation, always takes a leading capital: the Acts, an Act. Regulations on the other hand are lower-cased unless referring to a specific regulation: the regulations, but the Building Regulations 1992. Don’t ask me why. Bills (Acts which have not yet passed) follow the same form as regulations – lower case for bills in general, leading caps for a specific bill. See also Legislation (p. 67) and Referencing enactments (p. 87). - 18 - Style Guide Action Action is a noun. Avoid making it do double duty as a verb, as in: ‘I have actioned your memo’, for something that has been done or started. Action verbs Action verbs express actions. Think of the difference between ‘I sing’ (action verb) and ‘I am a singer’ (verb of being). When possible, replace verbs of being with action verbs. Active voice See Passive voice (p. 80). Actually If including this word adds nothing to your sentence (which is probably the case), delete it. Adequate When adequate comes before noun, it is followed by for: ‘they had adequate evidence for a conviction’. When adequate comes after a verb, it is followed by to: ‘the evidence was adequate to convict him’. - 19 - Style Guide Adherence or adhesion Use adherence when talking figuratively: ‘adherence to a plan’. Adhesion refers to something that literally sticks: ‘the adhesion of chewing gum to the sole of your shoe’. See Coherence or cohesion (p. 35). Adjectives and adverbs An adjective is a word that modifies a noun or a pronoun and answers which one, how many, or what kind: ‘red shoes’, ‘an old book’, ‘my doting nanny’. Adverbs usually modify verbs, and answer in what manner or to what degree, when, how, or how many times: ‘she sang loudly’, ‘I’ll do it soon’, ‘we went often.’ Sometimes adverbs modify adjectives or other adverbs: ‘she sang very loudly’ (very modifies the adverb loudly, which in turn modifies the verb sang) Adopted or adoptive Adopted for the child, adoptive for the parent: adopted son, adoptive father. Advance, advanced, advancement An advance plan is to one that is made ahead of time. An advanced plan is one that is ahead of its time. Advancement refers to promotion. - 20 - Style Guide Adverse or averse Adverse means unfavourable, averse means unwilling. You have adverse playing conditions, but you are averse to playing in those conditions. Averse is always followed by to and the gerund (the ‘ing’ form of a verb). Advice or advise Advice (with a c) is a noun. Advise (with an s) is a verb. Let’s ask Harry for advice, he can advise us. Affect or effect Affect with an a is usually a verb; effect with an e is usually a noun. When you affect something, you have an effect on it. Effective is the adjective. Affect, when used as a noun, means ‘to pretend to have’ or ‘to feel’, which is where ‘affectations’ comes from. Effect, when used as a verb, means ‘to bring about’ or ‘to accomplish’. Confused yet? Affinity Unless you are a scientist, one thing has an affinity with the other. Keep ‘affinity for’ in the lab. - 21 - Style Guide Agree to or agree with To agree to something is to give your consent. To agree with something is to approve of it. You can have one without the other: ‘she agreed to the proposed changes even though she did not agree with them’. Agreement Parts of a sentence should agree with each other. This is one of the fundamental rules of grammar. Usually this is straightforward, but a plural noun in front of the singular verb can throw you off: ‘any one of the options are available’. The verb are shouldn’t agree with options, but with the subject, one. The sentence should read, ‘any one of the articles is available’. Two singular words coordinated by and take the plural: my mother and father have a new house. A preposition or a verb that governs two pronouns can also cause problems. In ‘He has invited you and I for dinner,’ the word I should be me: he invited you and he invited me, so he invited you and me. See also Each (p. 47), Every (p. 50), None (p. 74); and Criteria (p. 39), Data (p. 42), and Media (p. 71). Alignment Documents should be left aligned. For special layout requirements for parts of unit standards or qualifications see those specific formatting guides. - 22 - Style Guide Also Avoid beginning sentences with also. See Ker-plunk (p. 65). Alternate or alternative Alternate (adjective) means going back and forth between two things: ‘Toby spent alternate weekends with his father’. Alternative means other: ‘Toby had alternative plans for the weekend’. Ambiguity Ensure that your sentences are clear and can only be interpreted one way – the way you want them to be. Make the right choices with words, word order, and punctuation and keep sentence structure as simple as possible. Hyphenate modifying compounds to avoid confusion: an old-furniture salesperson clearly deals in old furniture, but an old furniture salesperson would be a geriatric who sells furniture. Repeat nouns if it is not clear to which noun or pronoun applies: ‘Winona and Gwyneth stepped on to the red carpet on Oscar night. She looked the very picture of the classic Hollywood movie star.’ She who? It is only obvious to those with insider knowledge that this must refer to Gwyneth. For anyone else, the noun must be repeated to make the message clear. Recast sentences if it’s not clear which nouns your pronouns refer to. See also Dangling participles (p. 41). - 23 - Style Guide American spellings Don’t use them. Except in the case of computer programs (see Programme or program). Ensure your spell-checker is on English (New Zealand) and any dictionary you refer to – should be the Concise Oxford – uses standard British spelling. Among or between Use between for two things, among for more than two. And/or If both things are required, use and; if either thing is acceptable, use or. Only when either both or one is acceptable should you use and/or. See Oblique. Antecedent A technical term in grammar for the word or phrase to which a relative pronoun refers: ‘she didn’t like calamari which always tasted of rubber bands,’ the relative pronoun which stands in for the word calamari, so calamari is the antecedent. In the sentence: ‘the boys couldn’t look at the picture without giggling, which always got them in trouble,’ the word which refers back to the entire preceding clause (the boys couldn’t look at the picture without giggling), so the whole clause is the antecedent. - 24 - Style Guide Anticipate To anticipate something is to get ready for it or to do something in advance; this is not the same as expect. If you expect changes, you think they’ll be coming soon; if you anticipate changes, you foresee them and are preparing to deal with them. Any way, shape, or form Avoid using this cliché. Apostrophe The most common way to form a possessive in English is with an apostrophe. When using the singular form, it is positioned before the s: ‘a hard day’s night’. When using the plural form, the apostrophe is placed after the s: ‘the girls’ team’ or ‘two hours’ work’. If a plural doesn’t end in s – children, women, people – then the possessive s goes after the apostrophe: children’s playground, women’s secrets, people’s houses. The possessives of pronouns never get apostrophes. See It’s or its (p. 61). For possessive singular nouns that end in s, use s’s: James’s house’. Don’t use apostrophes to make acronyms or other abbreviations plurals. Not ‘they had their MRI’s’, but: ‘they had their MRIs’. To refer to a decade, don’t use an apostrophe before the s. Refer to the 1960s or the ‘60s (the apostrophe indicates that ‘19’ has been omitted). If using a semi-serif font, such as Times New Roman, ensure that the apostrophe points in the direction of the omission: ‘60s not ‘60s. See also Contractions (p. 39) and Attributive nouns (p. 27). - 25 - Style Guide Appendices or appendixes There are two plurals for appendix. Appendices, is the plural to use for those add-on bits at the end of books or manuals. Appendixes, is the plural to use for those funny little body bits which sometimes burst. Apposition Two phrases are in apposition when they’re logically equivalent and in the same grammatical relation to the rest of the sentence: it’s a way of explaining a word or phrase, or giving additional information about it. ‘I spent the evening watching my favourite movie, The Sound of Music.’ The second phrase explains the first. Commas are usually required around the appositional phrase: ‘The summer of ‘04, the wettest on record, was followed by a warm autumn’. Articles English has two sorts of articles: the definite article (the), and indefinite articles (a and an). Pay attention to whether the definite article is required. For example, a performance criterion beginning ‘Consequences ...’ may be taken to imply that only some consequences are involved, whereas a performance criterion beginning ‘The consequences ...’ implies that all critical consequences are required. Assist I assist someone in doing something, not to do something: ‘let me assist you in evaluating that report’, not ‘let me assist you to evaluate that report’. Of course, you could always use help instead. - 26 - Style Guide Assure, ensure, insure You assure a person that things will go right by making him confident. Insure is what an insurance company does. Ensure means to make sure, as in ‘ensure that this is done by the deadline’. As or like See Like or as (p. 68). As yet Consider using yet. Nothing is lost in saying ‘The report is not completed yet’, rather than ‘The report is not completed as yet’. Either way the report’s not finished. At the present time, at this point in time Never, never, never. Attributive nouns One of the most difficult decisions to make about possessives and plurals of compound words occurs when you can’t decide whether the first noun in a compound structure is acting as a noun that ought to be showing possession, or as an attributive noun, essentially an adjective. Am I a member of the Publishers Union or the Publishers’ Union? Am I going to the Singers Workshop or the Singers’ Workshop? Check any sources you can to see what the organisation calls itself (publishers/publishers’ union), or what it calls those things it controls (singers/singers’ workshop). If that gives you no help then make a choice and stick with it. Be consistent within your document or batch of documents. See Compound words (p. 37) and Apostrophe (p. 25). - 27 - Style Guide Audience Yes, you have an audience! Every time you write something that someone else will read your attention should be on the effect it will have. How easy will it be for them to interpret your intent? Will their interpretation match your expectations of their interpretation? Averse or adverse See Adverse or averse (p. 21). - 28 - Style Guide B A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Bacteria Bacteria is the plural. If there’s only one of the slippery little devils, the word you need is bacterium. Basically Qualifiers such as basically, essentially, totally, etc, rarely add anything to a sentence; they’re the written equivalent of ‘um’. Basis See On a ... basis (p. 78). Because of or due to See Due to or because of (p. 45). - 29 - Style Guide Begs the question Despite what you hear on the 6 o’clock News, it does not ‘beg the question’ to ask when a town will be rebuilt after it’s been flooded. That’s inviting a question. Being that … If you mean because, since, or something equally direct, then say so. Between or among See Among or between (p. 30). Beverage Beverage should only be used in the sense of ‘the Food and Beverage Industry’ otherwise I believe the word you’re looking for is drink. Biannual or biennial Biannual means twice a year, biennial means once every two years. If you can’t remember which is which – and who can – use ‘twice a year’ and ‘every two years’. - 30 - Style Guide Bill A bill is a proposed law which is still undergoing Parliamentary hoo-ha. Lower case is used when discussing a bill in the general sense. Leading caps are used when it is a specific bill: the Transmission Gully Bill. It becomes an Act if passed into law. Block quotations Short quotations usually appear in the text surrounded by quotation marks, ‘like this’. Longer quotations should be offset as block quotations or extracts, like this: Don’t use quotation marks around a block quotation: the indention is enough to indicate it’s a quotation. Block quotations should use the same spacing rules that are applied to the rest of the document. Always be sure to include proper citations in block quotations; the usual route is to put the citation in parentheses after the closing punctuation in the quotation itself. See Citation (p. 34). Blueprint Unless you’re an architect there is no need to use this word. Ever. Boldface See Fonts (p. 52), Italics (p. 61), and Titles (p. 98). - 31 - Style Guide Brackets Round brackets are used to mark off a parenthesis (like this one) in a sentence. However, don’t use brackets if it’s more suitable to use commas or dashes to mark off a parenthetical sub-clause. Full stops should go outside the brackets if the parenthetical remark is part of a larger sentence, but inside the brackets if it isn’t. Here is an example of the first (the punctuation goes outside, because we’re still part of the outer sentence). (Here is an example of the second; we’re no longer inside any other sentence so the full stop goes inside.) Square brackets are used to indicate editorial changes in a quotation: ‘[Here’s] an example’. The only other place they should be used is when referencing a qualification: [ref: 1776]. Curly brackets {these funny ones} should be used only in the appropriate place in pointy-head stuff like maths and science. See also Ellipses (p. 48) and Sic (p. 93). Bullet points The default for bullet points should be set to the basic round solid point. Use lower case letters and dashes rather than proper sentence punctuation • given that bullet points are used heavily in our documents, the Editorial Board recommends that all items with bullet points use lower case letters and dashes instead of more formal punctuation - this is easier on the eye • lists will usually require a full stop at the end of the final point. If using bullet points as a general tool to separate tasks or ideas, each bullet point should contain a complete sentence and normal rules of punctuation (including capital letters and full stops) apply. - 32 - Style Guide C A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Capable Capable relates to someone’s competence, so can only be followed by an active verb: ‘is capable of doing’; not a passive: ‘is capable of being done’. The phrase ‘is capable of doing’ can often be better rendered as ‘is able to do’, or turned into an active verb with ‘can do’. Capitalisation It’s customary to capitalise: • The first word of a sentence; • The major words in the title of a work; • Proper nouns (names), including most adjectives derived from proper nouns (Spanish from Spain, Freudian from Freud), and academic subjects such as French or English; • Personal titles when they come before a name (Mr Smith, Ms Jones, Dr Spock, Captain Beaky, Reverend Timothy Lovejoy); • All (or most) letters in an abbreviation (NCEA, MRI). See House style (p. 57) and Titles (p. 98). - 33 - Style Guide Centralised Use central whenever possible. See Personalised (p. 80). Citation Cite your source for every direct quotation and every borrowed idea. Where performance criteria refer to publications such as legislation, regulations, Government guidelines, industry codes of practice, national or international quality standards, etc, these publications must be fully cited in the special notes. To indicate that an electronic source is the only known source, use ‘at’. To indicate that the electronic source is a parallel reference to a printed source, use ‘available at’. A set approach to capitalisation and punctuation should be adopted. As we deal with many disciplines and associated reference styles (for example APA or Harvard citation) the main thing is consistency. Examples: Book: Author or Editor (ed), Title of Book (Place: Publisher, year), page no(s). Journal: C Dewhirst ‘Hot air over the Himalayas’ (1986) vol 1, no 4, World Geographic, 44-55. New Zealand Standards NZS 5261: 2003 Gas Installation. Government papers NZ GCP1: 1993 New Zealand Gas Code of Practice for Inspection, Testing and Certification of Gasfitting Work Done Under Supervision, Ministry of Economic Development, available at www.med.govt.nz. www: http://www.nzqa.govt.nz/framework/index.html see also E-citation (p. 47). Curriculum documents Mathematics in the New Zealand Curriculum, Ministry of Education (Wellington: Learning Media, 1992). Tauaki Marautanga Pāngarau, Ministry of Education (Wellington: Learning Media, 1994). - 34 - Style Guide Clarity Writing should be clear to the reader, not just to the person writing it. See Audience (p. 28), Ambiguity (p. 23), Precision (p. 81), Obfuscation (p. 77), and Vocabulary (p. 102). Coherence or Cohesion Use coherence to talk about how ideas are progressing. Use cohesion to talk about ‘sticking together’, whether literally (by glue, etc) or metaphorically (friends, family, All Black fans). See also Adherence or adhesion (p. 20). Colon A colon marks a pause for explanation or elaboration. Use a colon to introduce a list: thing one, thing two, and thing three. Use it to pause and explain: this sentence makes the point. Use it to give an example: this, for instance. It is also used to introduce a block quotation or a list of bullet points. See also Semicolon (p. 91). Commas A few places commas should be used: • As a substitute for and in a series: April, May, and June. A comma is to be used before the last item in a list: ‘April, May, and June.’ This is known as the Oxford comma. Otherwise, you run the risk of suggesting the last two items are some sort of special pair. • Between adjectives: short, sharp shots; but not where the second adjective and the noun form a type of compound noun: a good little boy. In that case, little boy forms a compound and the emphasis is on good: there was a little boy and he was good. Compare this with a good, little boy: there was a boy, he was good and he was little. • After However, Furthermore, or In addition when these start a sentence. - 35 - Style Guide A few places commas should be avoided: • Between a month and year in a date: not November, 2004, but November 2004. • After and, but, and or, unless the comma sets off a phrase which can’t stand alone as a sentence. It’s wrong to write; ‘But, Ben did win New Zealand Idol.’ You need a set-off phrase: ‘But, despite my vote for Michael, Ben did win New Zealand Idol.’ • Before and or but if the subject before continues to be the subject after. For example, you wouldn’t want a comma here: ‘Ben won New Zealand Idol and became a pop sensation.’ The subject, Ben, is the same both sides of the and. But you would want one here: ‘Ben won New Zealand Idol, and it made him a pop sensation.’ In the second example, the subject changed from Ben on one side of the comma to NZ Idol on t’other. Comma splices See Run-on sentences (p. 36). Compare to or compare with To compare something to something else means to state a resemblance between them; to compare something with something else means to note the resemblances and differences between them. Complement or compliment A complement is something that is needed to make a thing perfect. A compliment is an expression of admiration or praise. Both words can be nouns: ‘that new handbag was a perfect complement to Gwyneth’s outfit and she received many compliments for her stylishness’. Or they can be verbs: ‘that new handbag complemented Gwyneth’s outfit perfectly and she was complimented many times for her stylishness.’ - 36 - Style Guide Compound words There are three forms of compound words: closed, in which the words are joined together; hyphenated; and open. When compound modifiers precede a noun, they are often hyphenated: parttime teacher, fifty-metre-long pool, fire-resistant curtains, high-speed chase. When those same modifying words come after the noun, however, they are not hyphenated: a pool fifty metres long, curtains that are fire resistant, etc. For hyphenated forms, the pluralising usually attaches to the element being pluralised (often the noun): fathers-in-law, passers-by. Take care when pluralising compounds derived from French where the compound takes the noun-modifier form: courts-martial, Attorneys-General, notaries public, etc. And in case you were wondering, it’s officially gins-and-tonics when you order a round. Normally, compounds created by adding a prefix are not hyphenated. Some exceptions to this include: • compounds in which the second element is capitalised or a number (pre1999, non-Catholics) • compounds which need hyphens to avoid confusion (un-ionised, in the sense of chemistry, as distinguished from unionised, in the sense of industrial relations) • compounds in which a vowel would be repeated and clarity would be lost (semi-independent, anti-intellectual) • compounds consisting of more than one word (non-English-speaking, second-class citizen) • compounds that would be difficult to read without a hyphen (co-edited). See also Suspended compounds (p. 95), Attributive nouns (p. 27), and the list of commonly used compound words (p. 11). - 37 - Style Guide Comprise Comprise means comprehend or contain: an orchestra comprises musicians it’s not comprised of them. Avoid using the phrase ‘is comprised of’. Concise Oxford See Dictionaries (p. 43). Conjunctions As in don’t start sentences with them. Conjunctions are little words that connect various elements in a sentence. They come in two flavours: (1) Coordinating conjunctions The most common are and, but, or, and nor. Coordinating conjunctions connect two things of the same kind: two nouns (pavlova or ice-cream), two verbs (drinks and smokes), two adjectives (hot and humid), two adverbs (quickly but carefully), or two independent clauses (Dylan writes better songs, but Britney sells more records). (2) Subordinating conjunctions A subordinating conjunction joins an independent clause to a dependent one, and it’s the conjunction that makes the dependent clause dependent. Take two independent clauses: ‘I went shoe shopping’ and ‘I was depressed’. We can glue them together with a coordinating conjunction: ‘I went shoe shopping and I was depressed’. Although this is clear, it doesn’t suggest a connection. A subordinating conjunction will show the relation: ‘I went shoe shopping because I was depressed’. Ahh. - 38 - Style Guide Considered as, considered to be Take the following: ‘this criterion is considered as essential’ or ‘this criterion is considered to be essential’, what value do the italicised words add? They could be rephrased as ‘this criterion is essential’, without losing meaning. Continual or continuous Continual means ‘happening over and over again’; continuous means ‘happening constantly’. If it’s raining continually, it means the rain keeps stopping and starting. If it rains continuously, you need to stay in and watch Elvis movies – it isn’t going to stop. Contractions Avoid using contractions (such as aren’t, don’t, it’s, they’re) in formal reports. In less formal communications, if you do use them, put the apostrophe in the right place (that is, in place of the missing letter). Criteria This is a plural noun: ‘the criteria are’, not ‘the criteria is’. The singular is criterion. See also Media (p. 71), Data (p. 42), and Agreement (p. 22). Currently Use now or let a present-tense verb do the work. No meaning is lost if you use ‘this qualification is not registered’ or ‘this qualification is not yet registered’, rather than ‘this qualification is currently not registered’. - 39 - Style Guide - 40 - Style Guide D A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Dangling participle A present participle is a verb ending in ing, and is called dangling when the subject of the ing verb and the subject of the sentence don’t agree. Here’s an example: ‘Swerving to avoid the other cyclists, Daphne’s bike chain snapped in two.’ The subject is Daphne’s bike chain, but it’s not one doing the swerving. Recast the sentence: ‘While Daphne was swerving to avoid the other cyclists, her bike chain snapped in two.’ See Ambiguity (p. 23). Dash There are three main types of dashes: • em-dash (because it’s the width of the letter m); • en-dash (yep, you guessed it); and • hyphen. They each serve a different purpose. You won’t need the en-dash unless working on Achievement Standards where it is used to separate a range of numbers. For qualifications and unit standards use a hyphen in a range. An em-dash is used to mark a parenthesis – like this – or an interruption. Don’t confuse it with a hyphen. Dashes can be seen as a little informal so parentheses or commas should be used, not dashes, to indicate a parenthetical subclause in formal writing. If using dashes – in less formal writing – they should have spaces around them. See Hyphen (p. 57). - 41 - Style Guide Data Who can remember the last time they used the word datum? As in the singular of data. Datum is dead. Treat data as a collective noun: ‘the data is’, not ‘the data are’. See Criteria (p. 39), Media (p. 71), and Agreement (p. 22). Dates In text, write the date in full: 10 November 2004. Where dates must appear in figures, house style is 10/11/04. Decimate Never use decimate when its object is modified: ‘the kakapo population was decimated’, not: ‘the kakapo population was decimated by half’. Definite articles See Articles (p. 26). Definitions Definitions of terms (glossaries) should be included where these serve to clarify the standards. Definitions should be clearly and simply expressed, and translations or explanations must be included for any terms not in common usage. The term being defined should be differentiated from ordinary text by using italics. If the italicised term starts a sentence in the definitions section, normal rules of capitalisation apply (no matter how the term appears in the main body of the document). - 42 - Style Guide Denotation and connotation A denotation is a word’s literal meaning; a connotation is the suggestions and associations that go with it. Be conscious of the hidden meanings carried by your words. See Audience (p. 28). Diction In regards to writing, diction simply means ‘choice of words’. Because of the joy English takes in adopting words from other languages, we have many synonyms or near synonyms for the same concept. These synonyms can often be arranged in a kind of hierarchy, for example: consume, dine, eat. The important thing is to be consistent within sentences (and documents) and not jump at random between levels of diction. It is wrong to write: ‘may include but not limited to – bovine, ovine, deer, pig, goat, and horse.’ This should be rewritten as: ‘may include but not limited to – cattle, sheep, deer, pig, goat, and horse.’ Or, if you really must (oh, I must, I must): ‘ …bovine, ovine, cervine, porcine, hircine, and equine.’ And, in case you should ever need it, ostrich would be struthionine. Dictionaries The Concise Oxford Dictionary (most recent edition) should be your main reference tool. You also have to know how to use a dictionary. Pay attention to usage notes (colloquial, slang, offensive, derogatory, etc), be sure you choose the right words, and be sensitive to any associations your words may carry. - 43 - Style Guide Different The word different is often redundant: ‘several different criteria’ or ‘many different candidates’. Since you can’t have several of the same criterion or many of the same candidate, ‘several criteria’ and ‘many candidates’ will do nicely. Using different than is sure to get up someone’s nose. In most cases, using different to is the right choice: ‘apples are different to oranges’. Do not use the American different from. See Ker-plunk. Disinterested or uninterested To be disinterested means you are impartial; to be uninterested means you are not interested. To have a referee who is disinterested in the game he’s refereeing is a good thing, to have a referee who is uninterested in the game he’s refereeing is a bad thing. Discreet or discrete Someone who’s discreet can keep a secret. Something that’s discrete is separate or different: ‘primates are in a discrete order from other mammals’. Double negatives Sentences that contain double negatives are confusing for the reader and should be avoided. See Not un— (p. 74). - 44 - Style Guide Doubt As a verb, follow doubt with whether or if: I doubt whether he was telling the truth; I doubt if he is telling the truth. Doubt should not be followed by that or as to whether. Due to or because of Due to is used to modify nouns: ‘Gwyneth’s popularity is due to talent and style’, due to modifies popularity. Because of should be used to modify verbs: ‘Winona was shunned because of her criminal conviction’, because of modifies shunned. - 45 - Style Guide - 46 - Style Guide E A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W E-citation Use the full protocol (eg ‘http’) and URL (‘address’) of a Web-based reference or document: http://www.nzqa.govt.nz/framework/standard/registration/index.html To indicate that the electronic source is the only known source, use ‘at’. To indicate that the electronic source is a parallel reference to a printed source, use ‘available at’. See also Citation (p. 34). Each Each is a singular noun, which requires a singular verb. So it isn’t: ‘each of the girls have an ice-cream’; but: ‘each of the girls has an ice-cream’, or: ‘each girl has an ice-cream’. See Every (p. 50) and None (p. 74). Economy Doesn’t bureaucratic writing love wordiness? Get to know your Delete key. - 47 - Style Guide Editorial Board The NZQA Editorial Board must approve a publication intended for a publication of more 20 people or more before it’s disseminated. This includes letters, brochures, articles, speeches, and OHTs, in print or electronic form produced either in-house or commercially. Final drafts should be sent to the Communications Support Officer. Please refer to the Editorial Board guidelines at http://qanet/sci/communications/EBGuide. Effect or affect See Affect or effect (p. 21). Eg or ie The abbreviation eg is for the Latin exempli gratia, ‘for example’; ie, Latin id est, means ‘that is’. They’re not interchangeable. Never put full stops in these abbreviations and never italicise them. Ellipses The ellipsis (plural ellipses) is the mark that indicates the omission of quoted material. The ellipsis itself is three full stops. When it appears next to an end-ofsentence full stop use four full stops. No spacing is to be used between the stops in ellipses. Spacing can cause unpredictable line-wrap in electronic documents. - 48 - Style Guide Enactment Use the term enactment when you want to cover both Acts (legislation) and regulations. Enactment means the whole or a portion of an Act or regulations and regulations includes regulations, rules, bylaws, Orders in Councils, Proclamations, notices, or Warrants (s 29 Interpretation Act 1999). See Legislation (p. 67) and Referencing enactments (p. 87). Enquire or inquire Enquire is the verb (but don’t use it if ask will do). As a noun, inquiry is an investigation: ‘an inquiry into the incident’. Enquiries (noun) is a request for information (direct enquiries to reception); usually only used in the plural form. Equally as ... Don’t even think about it. Something can be ‘equally beautiful’, or it can be ‘as beautiful’, but it can’t be equally as beautiful. Essentially Essentially is a word you can do without. - 49 - Style Guide Every Every, requires a singular verb and singular pronouns. Don’t write ‘every one of the standards have been evaluated’; write ‘every one of the standards has been evaluated’ or ‘every standard has been evaluated’. The same rule applies to everyone: ‘everyone must sign his or her name’. See Each (p. 47), None (p. 74), and Sexist language (p. 92). Exists Exists is a word you can do without: ‘there is a problem with these qualifications’, is better than: ‘a problem exists with these qualifications’. Extracts See Block quotations (p. 31). - 50 - Style Guide F A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W The fact that … You can usually drop the fact and go with that by itself. Farther or further Farther applies to physical distance, further to metaphorical distance. You run farther than you did the day before, but investigate a story further. Fewer or less See Less or fewer (p. 68). Finalise To ‘finalise a plan’ is not to finish a plan, but to make it final. Don’t use finalise when you mean completed. See ―ise (p. 61). First, secondly, thirdly If you’re enumerating a number of ideas, use first, secondly, thirdly, etc, even if does seem a little inconsistent. - 51 - Style Guide First person The first person is I, me, my, we, and our. The second person is you and your. The third person is he, she, they, their, his, hers, him, and her. For the few times when this may need attention, see Shall or will (p. 93) and Sexist language (p. 92). Focus The usual plural of this is focuses. Only in scientific contexts should you use foci as the plural. Fonts Use Arial 12 pt for normal text. Forceful or forcible Forceful means powerful or impressive, forcible means involving force: ‘Brian’s forceful presentation convinced the electorate to vote for him.’ ‘Brian took the electorate by forcible means, burning and pillaging his way through Island Bay.’ In most cases, ‘by force’ can replace ‘by forcible means’. - 52 - Style Guide Foreign words and phrases You should only resort to foreign words or phrases when there isn’t an adequate English word to cover the concept you need to express. Foreign words and phrases should be in italics. Note: Māori words and phrases are not considered foreign. See Māori words and phrases (p. 71). Fortuitous Fortuitous means ‘happening by chance’; it is not interchangeable with fortunate. Functionality Do you mean function? See also Methodology (p. 71). - 53 - Style Guide - 54 - Style Guide G A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Generalisations Precision is always better than generalisations. Gerund See Dangling participles (p. 41). Grammar Grammar is the more scientific aspect of the study of a language. Grammar gives names to the various parts of speech and their relations. But if you’re wondering where to put only in a sentence, or when to use italics – that’s a question of usage or style rather than grammar. Grammar check Don’t rely on computerised grammar checkers. They miss most of the serious problems and often tell you to fix something that’s not broken. It is essential to proofread your work. See also Spell check (p. 94). - 55 - Style Guide - 56 - Style Guide H A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Half Half should have a singular verb when talking about quantity or amount: half the sand on the beach is imported from Northland; but a plural verb when talking about things that can be counted: half the grains of sand on the beach are imported. If you can count them, it’s plural; if you can’t, it’s singular. Hopefully Hopefully means in a hopeful way, not I hope. You’ll keep everyone happy by avoiding hopefully, in the sense of I hope, in any formal writing. See Ker-plunk (p. 65). House style House style refers to the choices about minor matters that each publishing house sets on its own. - 57 - Style Guide Hyphen Hyphens are used to: • separate a range of numbers: pp. 90-97 (the en-dash is used for this in Achievement Standards); • join two or more words to form a compound noun: role-play, mother-in-law; • join prefixes to nouns if - a vowel is doubled (anti-intellectual) - the noun takes a capital letter (un-American) - the prefix ex is being used to mean former (ex-member) - the word could be ambiguous (re-cover, re-form, re-creation). See Dash (p. 41) and the list of commonly used Compound words (p. 11). - 58 - Style Guide I A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Ie or eg See Eg or ie (p. 48). Impact Keep impact as a noun. A proposal, an event, or a meteor can have an impact, but the only thing that can be impacted is a wisdom tooth. Imperative The word imperative is common enough in formal writing, but it’s not very friendly. Go with must or should. Imply or infer A speaker implies something by hinting at it; a listener infers something from what is being said. They’re not interchangeable. - 59 - Style Guide Indefinite articles See Articles (p. 26). Indicative See Subjunctives (p. 95) and Shall or will (p. 93). Individual What’s wrong with person? Use individual only when you mean to make a distinction from a group. Infinitive See Split infinitive (p. 94). Intransitive Verbs See Transitive and intransitive verbs (p.98). Irony Don’t say something is ironic unless you’re sure that it is. Despite the song, it is not ironic to have a black fly in your chardonnay. It’s annoying. - 60 - Style Guide ―ise Adding this suffix is a common way to make verbs from nouns and adjectives. Its meaning is ‘to make’. You would centralise records but store records in a central location, not a centralised location. See Finalise (p. 51) and Personalise (p. 80). Italics Use italics for book titles, for foreign words, to distinguish defined terms, and for emphasis. Refer to the appropriate formatting guide for unit standards or qualifications for when to use bold and underline in titles. There is no need to use underline for emphasis. See Titles (p. 98) and Fonts (p. 52). It’s or its It’s with an apostrophe means ‘it is’ while its without an apostrophe means ‘belonging to it’. Never, never, never put an apostrophe after the s. - 61 - Style Guide - 62 - Style Guide J A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Jargon Some technical terms are necessary, but ordinary language should not be abused with words such as: methodology, functionality, network (as a verb), parameters, grow (as in to grow the company), etc. Judgement or judgment Use judgement as the preferred spelling. Justification Left-hand justify your reports. Use the formatting guides for individual parts of unit standards or qualifications. - 63 - Style Guide - 64 - Style Guide K A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Ker-plunk Ker-plunk is what you do to your audience when you use an odd word or phrase or break a generally accepted rule of grammar or spelling. Avoid these pitfalls • and, but, or also at the beginning of a sentence • different from instead of different to • hopefully to mean I hope • prepositions at the end of the sentence • splitting infinitives • try and instead of try to. - 65 - Style Guide - 66 - Style Guide L A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Language Ensure your spell check is set on New Zealand English or, if you don’t have that option, Australian English (and hold the jokes on that one). Lead or led The past tense and past participle of the verb to lead is led: I lead my people now as I (have) led them in the past. Legislation Legislation or regulations relevant to the performance of the elements in a unit standard must be cited in the special notes using the short title (formal name of the Act and its year): Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992. The same rule applies for regulations: Health and Safety in Employment Regulations 1995. See also Referencing enactments (p. 87). - 67 - Style Guide Less or fewer Less means ‘not as much’; fewer means ‘not as many’. You eat fewer calories by eating less sugar; one beach has less sand than another but has fewer grains of sands. If you can count them, even theoretically, use fewer. Licence or license Licence (with a c) is a noun. License (with an s) is a verb. If I don’t renew my driver’s licence, I will no longer be licensed to drive. Like or as In formal writing, avoid using like as a conjunction. In other words, something can be like something else (in which case it’s a preposition), but avoid ‘Tidy your room like I told you to’. Quick test: there should be no verb in the phrase that follows like. Listing Don’t use listing (noun) when list will do. A phone book is a list of names and numbers, each of which is a listing. Lists The standard hierarchy for numbered lists is: (1) (a) (i) (A) - 68 - Style Guide Literally Only use literally where what you are saying is literally true. Long words There’s nothing wrong with long words as long as they’re used correctly. A word like methodology has its proper use, but it isn’t interchangeable with method. See also Obfuscation (p. 77), and Vocabulary (p. 102). - 69 - Style Guide - 70 - Style Guide M A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Macrons If you need to include macrons in your documents, you can download a Māori Keyboard driver from the ‘downloads’ section of the Microsoft New Zealand website here. Māori words and phrases Unit standards written in English may include individual Māori words or phrases. Terms that are in common usage do not need to be translated in a glossary. Words that could have a number of meanings but are being used in a specific way should be listed in a glossary in the special notes. Media A plural noun: ‘the media are’, not ‘the media is’. The singular is medium. See Agreement (p. 22), Criteria (p. 39), and Data (p. 42). Methodology Do you mean method rather than methodology? Methodology is the study of, or a system of, methods. Method is a way to do something. Militate or mitigate To militate against something is to work against it. Militate is almost always followed by against. To mitigate something is to make it less severe. - 71 - Style Guide Modifier A modifier simply gives additional information about a word: instead of ‘sing’ (sing how?), we get ‘sing loudly’. Modifiers are usually adjectives or adverbs. - 72 - Style Guide - 73 - Style Guide N A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Necessitate If you mean require, say require, or rework the sentence so that necessitate is not necessitated. Network Network was very happy when it was just a noun. Don’t force it to serve double duty as a verb unless talking about networking a computer system. Never and always Any rule of grammar or house style that begins with never or always should be suspect. This doesn’t mean gleefully breaking all the rules, but sometimes not splitting an infinitive, or moving a modifier closer to the word it modifies, makes for clumsy English; your writing should be clear and unambiguous. See Audience (p. 28). - 74 - Style Guide Non-discriminatory language Language that creates unnecessary or unreasonable barriers to access in terms of gender, ethnicity, or cultural background should not be used. Section 21, Human Rights Act 1993, prohibits discrimination on the grounds of: sex; marital status; religious or ethical belief; colour; race; ethnic or national background; disability; age; political opinion; employment status; family status; and sexual orientation. See also Sexist language (p. 92). None None is singular (a contraction of ‘not one’), and needs a singular verb to agree with it: none of these books is French. See also Agreement (p. 22), Each (p. 47), and Every (p. 48). Nor You can’t go wrong if you use ‘nor’ for a second thing only if you use ‘neither’ for the first thing: ‘Neither Dr Kahu nor Dr Warner worked in Guatemala.’ Not un— This phrase, as in ‘the story was not untrue’ is clumsy. George Orwell didn’t like it and that’s good enough for me! See Double negatives (p. 44). Noun A noun is a person, a place, or a thing. Well, with qualifications. A thing has to be defined broadly enough to include things that aren’t particularly thingy like November, damp, and integrity. See also Pronoun (p. 82). - 75 - Style Guide Numbers Spell out numbers less than ten and write them as numerals greater than ten. Never begin a sentence with a numeral: either spell out the number, or rewrite the sentence to move the number from the beginning. Use figures for sums of money, percentages, ratios, addresses, and units of measurement. Use figures, not text, for mixed fractions (2½) and the numbers 10 and higher. When referring to spans of figures, use whole numbers with a separating hyphen: at pp 103-105. Very large round numbers should be spelled out: one billion. Never use both numerals and words for the same number, steer clear of abominations like ‘two (2)’ or ‘12 (twelve).’ It’s okay to mix spelling and numerals with very large numbers: 8.6 million. Use numerals for anything difficult to spell out and spell out simple fractions like one-half or two-thirds. - 76 - Style Guide - 77 - Style Guide O A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Obfuscation Don’t use long words where short ones will do. Sometimes, the wrong word is used for the sake of using a long word over a short one, for example centralised instead of central. Sometimes, the long word is correct but there’s a shorter alternative which would make your writing less complex, for example words ending in —ality, — ation, —ise, —isation, —ational, and so forth. Ask if these suffixes can be removed without altering the sense. For instance ‘the assistant brought about the organisation of the conference’, can be substituted by ‘the assistant organised the conference’. Some other suggested changes: methodology to method, utilised to used, usage to use, functionality to function. See Long words (p. 69) and Vocabulary (p. 102). Oblique The oblique is the forward slash thingy (/). The only time this should be used is for and/or when either of those options is available. See And/or (p. 24) and Slash (p. 93). - 78 - Style Guide On a ... basis Often a long way of saying something simple: ‘on a monthly basis’, adds nothing to ‘monthly’. Instead of: ‘the reports are produced on a monthly basis’, you can say: ‘the reports are produced monthly’. Only Try for precision by putting the modifier next to the word or phrase it modifies, unless it makes your sentence clumsy or unidiomatic. Oxford comma See Commas (p. 35). Oxford English Dictionary See Dictionaries (p. 43). - 79 - Style Guide P A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Paragraphs A paragraph can be as short as a sentence or as long as it has to be as long as it contains only one developed idea. To indicate the start of a new paragraphs use the skip-a-line rule. There is no need to indent the first line of the paragraph. Participles See Dangling participles (p. 41). Particular This particular word, in many particular circumstances, serves no particular purpose. Use your Delete key. - 80 - Style Guide Passive voice The active voice takes the form of ‘A does B’; the passive takes the form of ‘B is done [by A]’. Use the active voice when you can. Instead of: ‘you will be given a report’ (passive), try: ‘I will give you a report’ (active). Per If you mean according to then say so. Per se If you mean in itself then say so. Person See First person (p. 52). Personalise Do you mean personal rather than personalise? Personalise means to make something personal; something was not personal but now it is. See ―ise (p. 61) and Obfuscation (p. 77). - 81 - Style Guide Plus Limit the use of the word plus to mathematics, and use and or with instead. The same goes for the plus sign (+). Practice or practise Practice (with a c) is a noun. Practise (with an s) is a verb. I have to go to singing practice tonight where I will practise my singing. Precision Precision means choosing the right word, putting your words in the right order, and using the right grammatical construction to make your point. Prepositions at the end Prepositions are usually little words that indicate direction, position, location, and so on. Words like: to, with, from, at, in, near, by, beside, above. Prepositions should usually go before (pre-position) the words they modify. Putting a preposition at the end of a sentence is a guaranteed way to irritate someone. See Ker-plunk (p. 65). Of course, ignore this rule if it’s going to make your sentences clumsy or difficult to read. - 82 - Style Guide Prescriptive and descriptive Prescriptive grammars prescribe rules for proper usage: thou shalt not split infinitives, thou shalt not end sentences with prepositions. Descriptive grammars describe how people really speak and write. Words are used to communicate and some people really do care whether you split infinitives. See Audience (p. 28) and Rules (p. 89). Prior to If you mean before or earlier, then say so. Programme or program You are provided with a programme at the symphony; but the set of coded instructions that makes your computer work in the morning is a program. American spelling is okay for computer programs, British spelling for everything else. Proofreading You should always read your wrok carefully, looking for typoos, mispelled words, problem with agreement, words that missing, and so on. It’s okay to use a spell checker as a first-pass proofread but they do miss things that a real live person will spot. Pronoun A pronoun takes the place of a noun. Pronouns include he, it, her, me, and so on. There are a some special pronouns: possessive pronouns (my, hers, its); and relative pronouns (whose, which). Be careful that it is clear which noun your pronoun is standing in for. See Ambiguity (p. 23). - 83 - Style Guide Punctuation Apostrophes – For possessive singular nouns that end in s, use s’s: James’s house. Don’t use apostrophes to make acronyms or other abbreviations plurals. Capitalisation – The first word of an independent clause after a colon does not get a cap: ‘It leads me to one conclusion: she is a fantastic singer.’ Comma – A comma is to be used before the last item in a list: ‘the first, second, and third chapters’. Omitting the final comma – ‘the first, second and third chapters’ – runs the risk of suggesting the last two items (in the example above, the second and third chapters) are some sort of special pair. Dash – Brackets (the round ones) should be used (not dashes) to indicate a parenthetical subclause in formal writing. If using dashes – in less formal communication – they should have spaces around them. Ellipses – No spacing is to be used between the stops in ellipses. Spacing can cause unpredictable line-wrap in electronic documents. Interpolation – Square brackets are used to indicate editorial changes of letters at the beginning of a quotation: ‘[Here’s] an example’, or to indicate interpolation (including the use of sic). The only other place they should be used is when referencing a qualification: [ref: 1776]. Punctuation and spaces – Use two spaces after a full stop. Use one space after any other type of punctuation. Semicolon – The semicolon has only two common uses: to separate the items in a list after a colon, and to separate two independent clauses in one sentence. The first is obvious enough. For the second use, a simple test is this: if you can use a full stop and a new sentence, you can use a semicolon, providing that the idea or stream of thought is along the same lines. - 84 - Style Guide - 85 - Style Guide Q A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Quality This word is a noun. Leave it that way. Quality does not like to work as an adjective (high-quality work), or as an adverb (quality-built car). Quotation or quote Quotation is a noun. Quote is a verb: you quote, she quotes, we all quoted. The thing we all quoted is called a quotation. Quotation marks ‘Single quotation marks’ should be used for all quoted material. If you have a quotation inside a quotation then use “double quotation marks”: ‘Single quotation marks for quotations, “double quotation marks” for quotations inside quotations’. - 86 - Style Guide - 87 - Style Guide R A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Re If you mean concerning, regarding, or about then say so. Referencing enactments How to reference legislation and other enactments: Legislation or regulations relevant to the performance of the elements in a unit standard must be cited in the special notes using the short title (formal name of the Act and its year). For example: Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992. If a reference is also made to a particular section, the name of the statute follows the abbreviated section reference, do not use ‘of the’. For example, s 15 Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992. The same rule applies for Regulations: reg 26 Health and Safety in Employment Regulations 1995. Act, meaning a piece of legislation, always takes a capital: the Act, an Act. Regulations on the other hand are lowercased unless referring to a specific regulation: the regulations, but the Building Regulations 1992. Don’t ask me why. Bills (Acts which have not yet passed) follow the same form as regulations – lower case for bills in general, initial capitals for a specific bill. See Legislation (p. 67). The term ‘enactment’ means the whole or a portion of an Act or regulations and ‘regulations’ include regulations, rules, bylaws, Orders in Council, Proclamation, notice, or Warrant (s 29 Interpretation Act 1999). - 88 - Style Guide Abbreviations for component parts of legislation: Legislation component Section Subsection Paragraph Subparagraph Regulation Rule Clause Article Singular s subs para subpara reg r cl art Plural ss subss paras subparas regs rr cls arts References to Parts or Schedules of Acts are: Part II of the Employment Relations Act 2000, but Eleventh Schedule to the Employment Contracts Act 1991 (don’t ask me why). Amendment Acts These are always consolidated into the principal Act (ditto for regulations). There should be no need ever to refer to an amendment Act, as these are considered part of the principal Act. Regulations See Legislation (p. 67) and Referencing enactments (p. 87). Relative pronouns See Pronouns (p. 82) and That or which (p. 97). - 89 - Style Guide Rules The so-called rules of English grammar and style are just guidelines about what’s likely to be effective. See Prescriptive and descriptive (p. 82). They attempt to warn you in advance that a given use of language will affect readers in a predictable way. The guideline that warns against splitting an infinitive can be re-stated as: ‘If you do split an infinitive, you’ll annoy someone’. Don’t break the rules without a good reason. Run-on sentences A run-on sentence is not just a long sentence. It’s an ungrammatical one. Two sentences glued together with only a comma produce a run-on. For example, ‘I liked Michael, I think he should have beaten Ben.’ This sentence is ungrammatical. Here are some ways to fix it: • make it two sentences: I liked Michael. I think he should have beaten Ben. • add an and: I liked Michael, and I think he should have beaten Ben. • replace the comma with a semicolon: I liked Michael; I think he should have beaten Ben. • replace the comma and repeated subject with and: I liked Michael and think he should have beaten Ben. See Semicolon (p. 91). - 90 - Style Guide - 91 - Style Guide S A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Second person See First person (p. 52). Semicolon The semicolon has only two common uses. First, it’s used to separate the items in a list after a colon. This is fairly obvious. Secondly, it’s used to separate two independent clauses in one sentence. For this use, the test is if you can make this sentence into two valid sentences, you can use a semicolon. Sentence fragments A sentence fragment is a group of words trying to pass itself off as a sentence. Like this. Which is a bad habit. Not for formal writing. Make sure your sentences have a subject and a verb. - 92 - Style Guide Sentence structure A sentence should contain one idea, though that can be a complex or compound idea. Make sure that your use of punctuation avoids confusion or ambiguity. Prioritise information so that the main detail precedes any supporting point. If your sentence lacks clarity, or is too long, try reworking it into two short, simple sentences. Sexist language Usually, to avoid sexist language, a little sensitivity is all that’s needed. Probably the most difficult issue is the use of the third person indefinite pronoun, as in ‘Each provider is responsible for reviewing <pronoun needed here> Report’. But which pronoun is it correct to use? Each provider is singular so their (a plural) doesn’t agree with the verb, even if it’s common in speech. Using the indefinite third-person pronoun, one, makes you sound like you belong to the house of Windsor. This leaves his and her, or some combination of the two. Using only his can sound sexist. Using only her, can sound patronising. Using his or her or his/her (both are grammatical and non-sexist) can become clumsy after multiple appearances. See Oblique (p. 77). You can avoid the problem altogether by recasting your sentences and making your subjects plural: ‘All providers are responsible for reviewing their Reports’. See Each (p. 47), Every (p. 50), and None (p. 74) for singular nouns that require attention. - 93 - Style Guide Shall or will Will is usually the simple future indicative. Shall is related to the subjunctive, and means ‘let it be so’. If you don’t know what you’re doing with it, it’s best to leave shall alone. Sic Apart from necessary omissions and interpolations, quotations should be exact. To indicate any departure from the original, use ellipses or square brackets. If you need to quote something that’s wrong, you need something to show that it’s not your mistake. This is [sic]. You use square brackets to indicate that it’s an editorial change, and the word sic. It’s a foreign word (Latin for thus), so it gets italics. But, unless it’s going to cause confusion, there’s no need to use sic to draw attention to minor oopsies. Slash There’s loads of confusion over the use of the backslash and forward slash and remembering which is which. This is Mr Backslash (\) he’s very laid back. Network server addresses (file paths, document locations) use a backslash: Mrs Forward Slash (/) is leaning forward; she’s always in a hurry. The oblique is a forward slash and this is what web browsers use. Repeat after me: ‘web browsers use forward slash not backslash, web browsers use forward slash …’. See also Oblique (p. 77): So Avoid using so as an intensifier, as in ‘it’s so cold’, unless there’s a that clause involved. The that clause can be overt: ‘it’s so cold that the harbour is freezing over’, or implied: ‘it’s so cold the harbour is freezing over’. So on its own, where very belongs, is a no-no. - 94 - Style Guide Solidus See Oblique (p. 77). Spell check The spelling checkers built into most word processors are usually right when they tell you a word is misspelled. The problem isn’t false positives, but false negatives – the spelling checker tells you something is right when it isn’t. This is particularly bad with antonyms: if you’ve typed two instead of too, the spelling checker won’t pick it up – both are real words. Use spell check to do a first pass on your work before you proofread. See also Grammar check (p. 55). Split infinitive An infinitive is the form of a verb that comes after the to, as in ‘to sing’ or ‘to write’. A split infinitive occurs when another word comes between the to and the verb. Avoid them when you can but not if it makes your sentences clumsy or your meaning unclear. Would anyone be able ‘To boldly go where no man has gone before’, if the original producers of Star Trek had been afraid of splitting an infinitive? See Prescriptive and descriptive (p. 82) and Rules (p. 89). - 95 - Style Guide Square brackets See Brackets (p. 32). Subjunctives Unlike the indicative, which indicates that something is true, the subjunctive expresses a wish, a command, or a condition contrary to fact. Archaic English is full of subjunctives, as in ‘Would that it were’ and ‘Thou shalt not’. English has almost entirely lost the subjunctive, but it still shows up in a few places, most often in conditions contrary to fact, where we use were instead of is: ‘If this were any heavier [but it’s not - a condition contrary to fact], I couldn’t lift it’; ‘If she were to say that [but she’s not], I’d leave’. See Shall or will (p. 93). Suspended compounds When you have a series of closely related compounds, you might want to delay the final word until the last instance, allowing the hyphen to serve as a place holder: ‘both full- and part-time students will sit examinations’. See also Compound words (p. 37). - 96 - Style Guide - 97 - Style Guide T A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W That or which That and which are both relative pronouns. That is restrictive, which means it gives you necessary information about what came before: ‘The cinema that is most loved by Wellingtonians is the Embassy’. The that phrase answers an important question: which of the many cinemas are we talking about? And the answer is the one that is most loved. Which is non-restrictive, it does not limit the word it refers to: ‘Wellington’s oldest cinema, which is called the Embassy, has been successful so far’. The which provides extra information about the cinema we’re discussing: the oldest one. Basically, if you can tell which thing is being discussed (without the which or that clause), use which; if you can’t, use that. The See Articles (p. 26). Third person See First person (p. 52). - 98 - Style Guide Titles The font size for titles is normally set 2 points greater than the text above which it appears. Capitals should be used sparingly. Titles for unit standards, elements and performance criteria must appear as specified in the Formatting Guides. Titles of works Titles of books and other long works should be italicised. See Italics (p. 61). All the main words in a title should be capitalised – main means everything except articles, conjunctions, and prepositions: Pride and Prejudice (the conjunction and gets no cap). Totally Usually, you can omit this word from your sentence without changing the meaning. Transitive and intransitive verbs A transitive verb takes a direct object. It shows action upon someone or something (you hit something or someone; you don’t just hit). Intransitive verbs take no direct object; they need only a subject to make a sentence (you don’t sleep something; you just sleep). Don’t start redeploying verbs and giving the intransitive ones a direct object: ‘we have to think quality’, gives the intransitive think a direct object. Try and ... You try to do something, not try and do it. See Ker-plunk (p. 65). - 99 - Style Guide U A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Underline See Italics (p. 61). Unique Unique means ‘one of a kind’. There are no degrees. Something cannot be very unique or quite unique. Something is either unique or it’s not. Use special or unusual if you want to allow degrees. Uninterested or disinterested See Disinterested or uninterested (p. 44). Usage If you mean use then say so. Usage is a guide on how to use something properly. Use means one or more instances of using something, or it can mean function. Utilise and utilisation Use, whether used as a verb or a noun, is almost always better than either of these words. - 100 - Style Guide - 101 - Style Guide V A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Verbal Verbal means ‘related to words’. If you mean something that is spoken, use oral. Versus Versus (or vs) should be left where it belongs – with the lawyers. The problem lies with the confusion over the term: ‘Motor load characteristics of speed versus current are explained with the aid of graphs.’ Do you really want versus to mean against (its definition) in this context? I think not. If you mean in relation to, then say so. - 102 - Style Guide Via Should only be used for the route, not the transportation method: ‘he flew from Auckland to London via Singapore’; not ‘he flew from Auckland to London via Singapore Airlines’. Here’s a trickier one: ‘The reasons for using d.c. to interconnect the North and South Islands via the Cook Strait cable are stated.’ Correct or incorrect use? Well, the current is going from NI to SI and it’s going by way of the cable, but I say ‘incorrect’. The sentence is about the means by which the current will get to the SI, not the route it will take. Vocabulary It is better to know the precise meaning of more common words than to have a large vocabulary of obscure ones. You’ve failed to communicate if people don’t know what you’re on about. See also Long words (p. 69). Voice Voice is a technical term in grammar to describe a verb: the common voices in English are active and passive. Voice describes whether the subject of a sentence is acting or being acted upon. See Passive voice (p. 80) for details. - 103 - Style Guide W A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Which or that See That or which (p. 97). Who or whom A simple test to see which to use, is to replace who/whom with he/him. If he sounds right, use who; if him sounds right, use whom. For example: since ‘he did it’ and not ‘him did it’, use who did it; since we give something ‘to him’ and not ‘to he’, use to whom. - 104 -