AP Flashcards
academic departments
Use lowercase except for words that are proper nouns or adjectives: the department of history, the history department, the department of English, the English department, or when department is part of the official and formal name: University of Connecticut Department of Medicine. Do not abbreviate department.
addresses
use the abbreviations Ave., Blvd. and St. only with a numbered address: 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Spell them out and capitalize when part of a formal street name without a number: Pennsylvania Avenue. Lowercase and spell out when used alone or with more than one street name: Massachusetts and Pennsylvania avenues.
All similar words (alley, drive, road, terrace, etc.) always are spelled out. Capitalize them when part of a formal name without a number; lowercase when used alone or with two or more names. Always use figures for an address number: 9 Morningside Circle. Spell out and capitalize First through Ninth when used as street names; use figures with two letters for 10th and above; 7 Fifth Ave., 100 21st St. Abbreviate compass points used to indicate directional ends of a street or quadrants of a city in a numbered address: 222 E. 42nd St., 562 W. 43rd St., 600 K St. N.W. Do not abbreviate if the number is omitted: East 42nd Street, West 43rd Street. Use periods in the abbreviation P.O. for P.O. Box numbers.
affect, effect
Affect, as a verb, means to influence: The game will affect the standings. Affect, as a noun, is best avoided.
Effect, as a verb, means to cause: He will effect many changes in the company. Effect, as a noun, means result: The effect was overwhelming. He miscalculated the effect of his actions.
ages
Always use figures for people and animals (but not for inanimates): The girl is 15 years old; the law is eight years old. Use hyphens for ages expressed as adjectives before a noun or as substitutes for a noun. Examples: A 5-year-old boy, but the boy is 5 years old. The woman is in her 30s (no apostrophe).
a.m., p.m.
Lowercase, with periods. Avoid the redundant 10 a.m. this morning. Noon and midnight stand alone. Don’t use 12 noon or 12 a.m.
apostrophe (‘)
In general, use to show possession: the alumni’s contributions, women’s rights, Northridge’s reputation. If the word ends with an S put the apostrophe after the S: the campus’ appearance, the reporters’ deadlines. Do not use an apostrophe if it’s simply a plural and NOT a possessive. Wrong: She gave the CD’s to me. Right: He has too many CDs to count.
died
Use died, not passed away
held, hold
Use held only in the literal sense: He held the pencil. She wants to hold the baby. Do not use held when referring to events, concerts, conventions, etc. In most cases, the word held can simply be removed with no impact. For rare occasions, the words hosted or sponsored suffices. Wrong: The club held its meeting on Thursday. Right: The club had its meeting on Thursday. Wrong: The convention will be held at a hotel in Los Angeles Hotel. Right: The convention will take place at a hotel in Los Angeles Hotel.
it’s, its
It’s is a contraction for it is or it has: It’s up to you. It’s been a long time. Its is the possessive form of the neuter pronoun: The dog chased its tail.
months
Capitalize the names in all uses. When a month is used with a specific date, abbreviate only Jan., Feb., Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov. and Dec. Spell out the months with five letters or less: March, April, May, June and July. Spell out all months when using alone or with a year alone: The class ended in December. He was born in August 1980. (No comma between the month and year if a specific date isn’t used.)
Academic Degree
If mention of a degree is necessary to establish someone’s credentials, the preferred form is to avoid an abbreviation and use instead a phrase such as: John Jones, who has a doctorate in psychology.
numerals
Spell out one through nine; 10 and higher use numerals. Since graduating high school three years ago, Susan has had 12 jobs. Use numerals for sports scores (a 4-3 win), percentages (a 3 percent pay increase), court decisions (a 5-4 decision), ratios (a 2-to-1 ratio), weights (The baby weighed 9 pounds, 7 ounces.) and with million or billion (The nation has 1 million citizens. Rupert Murdoch is worth more than $5 billion.) Avoid starting a sentence with a numeral since it will need to be spelled out. If possible, rewrite the sentence. Wrong: 993 freshmen entered the college last year. Right: Last year 993 freshmen entered the college.
over
It generally refers to spatial relationships (The plane flew over the city) but is now acceptable when referring to a quantity. Both sentences are acceptable: Their salaries increased over $20 a week. Their salaries increased more than $20 a week.
percent
One word. It takes a singular verb when standing alone or when a singular word follows an of construction: The teacher said 60 percent was a failing grade. He said 50 percent of the membership was there. It takes a plural verb when a plural word follows an of construction: He said 50 percent of the members were there. Use figures: 1 percent, 2.5 percent (use decimals, not fractions), 10 percent. For amounts less than 1 percent, precede the decimal with a zero: The cost of living rose .06 percent. Repeat percent with each individual figure: He said 10 percent to 30 percent of the electorate may not vote.
quote marks
Use quote marks for exact, word-for-word comments. Put a comma inside the ending quote marks. “CSUN is a great place to learn,” said Stephanie Bluestein, journalism professor.