Should i capitalize bay area
Cohort programs Refers to programs that are offered in a lockstep manner, where the students stay together as a group, take the same courses at the same time, and the faculty members rotate in and out. College and school names The formal names of colleges and schools are capitalized: She attended the College of Arts and Sciences. Do not capitalize the college on second reference: School of Law but the law school.
Serial commas Use commas to separate elements in a series. Do put a comma before the conjunction of both simple and complex series: The flag is red, white, and blue. Commencement Mass Often incorrectly referred to as the Baccalaureate Mass. Computer terms Use website, web page, web, email, net, online, dot-com, chat room, database, homepage, HTML, laptop, log on verb , login noun , log off, and megabyte. Conference names Capitalize, but do not place in quotes.
Convocation Capitalize in all instances when referring to a USF Convocation ceremony: President's Convocation Academic Honors Convocation Convocation is lowercase on second reference, when used alone: The convocation was packed. Lowercase the names of subjects unless they are proper nouns or adjectives: He is taking an English class, a history class, and a French class this semester.
Coursework One word. Court cases Do not italicize names of court cases, and use v. Credit vs. Use numerals: The class is 4 units. Cura personalis Lowercase and italicize: The Jesuit tradition of cura personalis offers a distinct framework for educating the whole person. D Dashes There are several kinds of dashes, differing in length. It denotes a sudden break in thought that causes an abrupt change in sentence structure: He spent several hours carefully explaining the operation — an operation that would, he hoped, put an end to the resistance.
The principal use of the en dash is to connect continuing or inclusive numbers, such as dates, time, or reference numbers: The —01 school year. The hyphen is also used in compound adjectives: Writing is a full-time job.
Keyboard Commands Mac PC em dash shift-option-hyphen alt-ctrl-number keypad hyphen en dash option-hyphen ctrl-number keypad hyphen Dates Use a comma before the year: Dec. Eugene received a bachelor of arts in chemistry. See Degrees Dorm Always use residence hall rather than dorm or dormitory. Use e. Ireland or Greenland are unlikely to experience monsoons. Use i. Email Not e-mail. Ensure or insure Use the former to mean guarantee: Steps were take to ensure accuracy Use the latter for references to insurance: The policy insures his life Entitled Use it to mean a right to do or have something.
Events Event names are capitalized and are not put in quotes or italicized. Every day adv. She goes to work every day. He wears everyday shoes. Exclamation points Use them infrequently. The latter refers to an extension of time or degree. Do not capitalize when referring to general fellowships: The academic fellow taught at Oxford. Fewer, less Use fewer for individual items, less for bulk of quantity: Fewer than 10 applicants called.
GPA An abbreviation for grade point average. H Headlines Capitalize words with four or more letters. Hyphen see Dashes I Indigenous Capitalize "Indigenous" in reference to original inhabitants of a place.
Initials Use periods and no space when an individual uses initials instead of a first name: J. Johnson But use a space after a first initial then a middle name: R. James Brown Do not give a name with only a single initial: J. Jones Inter Refers to between or among. In general, no hyphen. Exception: inter-American. Center for Science and Innovation The full name should be used on first reference.
Abbreviate as Jr. Do not precede by a comma: Joseph P. M Magazine names Capitalize and italicize the name and do not place it in quotes. Always capitalize when referring to the ceremony, but lowercase any preceding adjectives: high Mass N Nonprofit Do not hyphenate. Numerals Spell out one through nine, use numerals for 10 and above. Dates are not ordinal: Oct. O Offices Capitalize only when needed for clarity or when referring to a formal office name.
Office of the President P People or persons Use person when speaking of an individual. Percentages Use figures in all cases: 1 percent, 2. Periods Use single spaces after a period. Priests See Religious Titles Programs see academic program names Project Capitalize when referring to the formal name of a project, but do not capitalize in later references to the project.
Pronouns Always use a person's pronouns of choice when known. Instead of using words that assume only two genders such as "ladies and gentlemen" use: friends colleagues associates staff faculty, etc. Even when not using pronouns, use words that do not assume gender in job titles such as: chair instead of chairman police officer instead of policeman staff instead of manpower first-year students instead of freshmen, etc.
Religious order abbreviations C. Order of Preachers Dominicans R. Religious of the Sacred Heart of Jesus R. Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary R. Religious of the Sisters of Mercy S. Society of Christ S. On second reference, use only a last name: The Rev. Billy Graham on first reference, Graham or the reverend on second.
I was born in 81 in the north bay, then and now we always said "the city". Possibly geographic? I was South Bay. That might actually explain it. When did you grow up there? I've heard those terms used extremely commonly from onwards. I was born in and left in So I guess I missed the start of it. I wonder what happened in I have no objection to "I went into the city today.
Oh, brother. I -- like everyone else in the Bay Area -- also say "the East Bay", "the Peninsula", "the North Bay", "the South Bay" and "the Central Valley" -- even though all of these things are just nouns with minimal adjectives that aren't unique to the Bay Area. Pretentious though it may be, if that's what it's supposed to be, that's what it has to be.
But in this case we are referencing that specific courthouse, not a generic courthouse. That is where the disagreement lies. Gin, vodka, wine, beer - those are generic terms for large categories of beverages. Riesling, Scotch, and Chardonnay are the proper nouns in the mix - naming certain specific individuals within the category. I suspect this arises from an attempt to make "cc" sound more formal.
It definitely sounds archaic; we're several technologies removed from actual carbon copying by now. But just using "cc" seems too breezy for most contexts. I'd go with the generic "copy. It's a generic albeit made up term for a math competition, not a proper noun. Now if this were, for example, the name of the event, such as The Fifth Annual Bay Area Mathalon, it should be capped.
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